Review Folk Pop music

Cindy

Another Country

Tough Love • 2026

Cindy initially sounds like the name of a single artist. In fact, behind it is the band around San Francisco songwriter Karina Gill, who presents her fifth studio album with Another Country. The title refers to the novel of the same name by James Baldwin, in which the characters search for closeness, belonging and their place in the world.

Exactly these questions run through the album too. Cindy, however, are less interested in clear answers than in the feelings in between: longing, uncertainty, memories and those hard-to-grasp moments that elude any clear language. The songs feel like small snapshots from everyday life: a fleeting thought, a brief encounter or a feeling that suddenly appears and disappears again just as quickly. That is precisely what gives Another Country its appeal. The pieces never reveal everything, but leave enough room to think further.

Musically, the album moves between indie folk and dream pop. The guitar riffs play a central role here, running like a thread through the record and becoming Cindy’s unmistakable sonic signature. On »Procession«, they sound calm and resonant, almost as though they were drifting along in the background. »Daytime«, by contrast, feels markedly livelier. The guitars leap and dance through the song, giving it an easy-going, happy mood. Above everything lies Karina Gill’s gentle voice, guiding us through warm, slightly dreamlike soundscapes in which one is glad to lose oneself a little longer.

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