Mary Knoblock - 'Peach'

7/10

There is something quietly arresting about the way Mary Knoblock makes music. While so many artists in the experimental-pop sphere seem intent on overwhelming the listener with noise, abstraction, or aesthetic excess, the Portland songwriter instead pulls you closer with stillness. And on her new album 'Peach', she offers a body of work that aches, glows, and unravels in equal measure.

Over these last few years, she has steadily carved out her own world somewhere between avant-garde composition, dreamlike folk, and cinematic confessionals. Yet 'Peach' feels like the moment all those ideas fully converge. Similar to how artists like Agnes Obel or Julia Holter transformed introspection into something almost spiritual, Knoblock uses restraint as her greatest strength here. Every whispered vocal, every sparse piano phrase, and every drifting texture feels placed with extraordinary care.

At its core, 'Peach' is a record about emotional survival. The album moves like faded memories replaying in the early hours of the morning, full of warmth and ache at the same time. There’s a tenderness running through the entire project that makes even its heaviest moments feel strangely comforting.

Vocally, she is magnetic throughout. Her voice often arrives like a distant memory surfacing unexpectedly, soft yet emotionally devastating. Combined with the album’s minimalist arrangements and blurred edges, the effect becomes hypnotic. It’s easy to lose yourself inside these songs without even realising how deeply they’ve settled under your skin.

Yet beyond the emotional resonance, 'Peach' also feels significant within her wider artistic evolution. Having already built an expansive catalogue that spans electronic experimentation, orchestral textures, and genre-defying production, this release feels more distilled and intimate than much of her previous work. There’s less emphasis on scale and more focus on emotional truth here.

And that honesty gives 'Peach' its lasting power. In an era where vulnerability is often packaged as spectacle, Mary Knoblock instead delivers something genuinely fragile and sincere. Warm, wounded, and quietly transformative, this is easily one of the most affecting independent releases of the year so far.

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