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IAN SWEET - SUCKER

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SUCKER

Release Date: November 3, 2023

SUCKER

Release Date: November 3, 2023

All formats include instant MP3 and WAV download.

This title is also available via our UK/Euro Store.

SUCKER, Jillian Medford's fourth album as IAN SWEET, is a massive leap forward for the songwriter and pop auteur. Perfectly merging her recently showcased pop sensibilities with the widescreen indie rock that she first made her name on, SUCKER is both sumptuous and fully realized, as Medford digs her hands into tough questions about looking ahead and personal growth. Her musical voice has only become more unique amidst an ever-growing field, and SUCKER is proof positive that even with a considerable discography in her arsenal, Medford is just getting started.

SUCKER follows Medford’s 2021 breakthrough and Polyvinyl debut Show Me How You Disappear, which chronicled her time spent in an intensive outpatient program that included six hours of group therapy a day. “Show Me How You Disappear was written during a really difficult period of my life after reckoning with a mental health crisis,” she explains. “I survived that very moment in my life through writing that record, and the extreme urgency to heal is reflected in the songwriting. With SUCKER, I felt more capable to take my time and experiment without being totally afraid of the outcome. It wasn't life or death—it was just life, and I was lucky to be living it.”

Work on the new album started in the fall of 2022; feeling newly untethered in the wake of a "COVID relationship" that had recently come to pass, Medford took a cross-country road trip from her L.A. home to an artist residency at The Outlier Inn – a New York Catskills based recording studio where she took up residence to demo and produce SUCKER in full. “I was feeling very stuck in L.A. and was trying to get comfortable with spending more time alone again,” she recalls about her hermetic confines, which included 24-hour studio access to create in an unfettered fashion. “I went there not knowing exactly what I wanted to do or make, but I knew I wanted to explore and get out of my comfort zone. I forced myself to make things on the spot, in the moment and not overthink it too much.”

Feeling inspired, Medford brought her demos to life with co-producers Alex Craig (Binki, Claud) and Strange Ranger's Isaac Eiger along with mixing engineer Al Carlson (St. Vincent, Jessica Pratt), all of whom helped shape SUCKER into its current form—a record that reconciles Medford’s beginnings with where she’s landed at this current moment.  “I revisited the reasons why I started playing music to begin with,” she explains. “I wanted to get more personal and showcase a more confident side musically and lyrically. I’ve always been very doubtful about my own work and don’t often share it with a lot of people. But there was something about this record where I felt very secure with what I was writing about and wanted everyone to hear.”

The result: ten songs that count as the strongest Medford’s ever put to tape, bringing to mind the guitar heroics of indie rock legends Broken Social Scene, the searing hooks of ‘90s alternative rock, Leslie Feist’s dusky songwriting, and shoegaze’s warmth. The quietly explosive title track is practically a miniature epic, with oceanic guitars rippling behind Medford’s tactile vocals, while first single “Your Spit” swerves and sways with a distinctly pop gait that packs a punch. 

“Sometimes I get imposter syndrome when I write poppier music, because of who people assume I actually am as a musician, and where they’d like me to fit in in the ‘indie’ space.” she says while talking about the song’s sound as well as navigating the expectations that come with being boxed in genre-wise. “I think the indie rock world really feeds off trauma. If you’re not going through something terrible, people are like, ‘What’s the story?’ That’s fucked me up a bit, but it’s a really beautiful thing when you’re feeling healthy and it shows in your music, too — and I don’t want to be forced into any narrative.” 

Indeed, SUCKER showcases Medford’s ability to push herself into previously unexplored territory: The arpeggiated and dusky beauty of “Emergency Contact” belies the songs’ biting sarcasm, as Medford reflects on codependency and a recent breakup that forced her to recognize destructive patterns she willingly—and sometimes, purposefully—falls into in spite of her best interests. “There’s some sneering energy to it, as I’m trying to convince myself that I didn’t really want what I had lost anyway,” she says. Then there’s the surging and anthemic “Smoking Again,” which Medford describes with a laugh as “pretty dramatic” before breaking down the song’s all-too-relatable themes: “I often put myself in situations that I know won’t be beneficial to me, just to get a rise out of myself. Almost like setting up obstacles just to see if I could overcome them.”

The disorienting sensation of falling in love and staying in love appears throughout SUCKER, but this isn’t a break up album so much as it is a reclamation album. “I’ve put a lot of pressure on myself over the years, and with this record I think the intention was to let go and put more trust in myself,” Medford states while discussing how this splendid album represents where she’s at as an artist—and SUCKER feels like the culmination of her personal and professional accomplishments so far, as well as the first step in a bold and exciting new future for IAN SWEET as a whole.

 

All songs written by IAN SWEET

Produced by Alex Craig and IAN SWEET

Additional production by Isaac Eiger

Live Drums by  Dan Howard

Engineered by Eamon Ford

Mastering by Joe LaPorta

Cover Photo by Lucy Sandler

Design & Layout by Alexa Viscius

Song Titles Lettering by Becca Christman

Tracklist

  • Bloody Knees
  • Smoking Again
  • Emergency Contact
  • Sucker
  • Comeback
  • Your Spit
  • Clean
  • FIGHT
  • Slowdance
  • Hard

Reviews

  • "[SUCKER] is full of stand-out moments of staggering dark synths, upbeat chords, and sheer creativity."

    - Consequence
  • "With the giddy highs and reeling aftermath of a relationship as a backdrop, [SUCKER] continues Show Me How You Disappear’s journey of personal growth by chronicling the twin aches of opening up to love and healing from it."

    - FLOOD
  • "hard-charging pop-rock"

    - Stereogum
  • "One of the most thrilling and experimental voices in indie rock."

    - Rolling Stone
  • "Retaining her commitment to emotional transparency, she leans into high-adrenaline hooks and poignant self-reflection with confidence and grit."

    - Pitchfork
  • "This album hurts in all of the best ways."

    - Paste
  • "With the giddy highs and reeling aftermath of a relationship as a backdrop, [SUCKER] continues Show Me How You Disappear’s journey of personal growth by chronicling the twin aches of opening up to love and healing from it."

    - FLOOD
  • "[IAN SWEET]'s willingness to reach into her most intimate moments and allow them to bloom within the context of gorgeous, memorable music and melodies make SUCKER a real experience." 

    - Under The Radar
  • "With newfound self-assurance, [IAN SWEET] constructs some of her most instinctual, visceral music yet."

    - UPROXX
  • "hard-charging pop-rock"

    - Stereogum
  • "[SUCKER] is full of stand-out moments of staggering dark synths, upbeat chords, and sheer creativity."

    - Consequence
  • "One of the most thrilling and experimental voices in indie rock."

    - Rolling Stone
  • "With newfound self-assurance, [IAN SWEET] constructs some of her most instinctual, visceral music yet."

    - UPROXX
  • "Retaining her commitment to emotional transparency, she leans into high-adrenaline hooks and poignant self-reflection with confidence and grit."

    - Pitchfork
  • "This album hurts in all of the best ways."

    - Paste
  • "hard-charging pop-rock"

    - Stereogum
  • "[IAN SWEET]'s willingness to reach into her most intimate moments and allow them to bloom within the context of gorgeous, memorable music and melodies make SUCKER a real experience." 

    - Under The Radar
    • #26 Rolling Stone (40 Best Indie Rock Albums of 2023)
    • #73 Paste (“Smoking Again” - 100 Best Songs of 2023)
    - Best of 2023
    • #26 Rolling Stone (40 Best Indie Rock Albums of 2023)
    • #73 Paste (“Smoking Again” - 100 Best Songs of 2023)
    - Best of 2023
    • #26 Rolling Stone (40 Best Indie Rock Albums of 2023)
    • #73 Paste (“Smoking Again” - 100 Best Songs of 2023)
    - Best of 2023
  • "[SUCKER] is full of stand-out moments of staggering dark synths, upbeat chords, and sheer creativity."

    - Consequence
  • "Retaining her commitment to emotional transparency, she leans into high-adrenaline hooks and poignant self-reflection with confidence and grit."

    - Pitchfork
  • "One of the most thrilling and experimental voices in indie rock."

    - Rolling Stone
  • "With the giddy highs and reeling aftermath of a relationship as a backdrop, [SUCKER] continues Show Me How You Disappear’s journey of personal growth by chronicling the twin aches of opening up to love and healing from it."

    - FLOOD
  • "[IAN SWEET]'s willingness to reach into her most intimate moments and allow them to bloom within the context of gorgeous, memorable music and melodies make SUCKER a real experience." 

    - Under The Radar
  • "With newfound self-assurance, [IAN SWEET] constructs some of her most instinctual, visceral music yet."

    - UPROXX
  • "This album hurts in all of the best ways."

    - Paste