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Girlpool was an indie rock band from Los Angeles, California, formed by friends Avery Tucker and Harmony Tividad.[2][3] Their debut self-titled EP Girlpool was released on Bandcamp in 2014 and re-released on Wichita Recordings later that year. They released their debut album Before the World Was Big in 2015, followed by Powerplant (2017) and What Chaos Is Imaginary (2019). Their fourth and final studio album, Forgiveness (2022), was released on April 29. In August 2022, the duo announced that they will be taking an indefinite break from the band.

Key Information

Background

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2013-2018: Girlpool, Before the World Was Big, and Powerplant

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2017 tour flyer with the same art as Powerplant

Girlpool was formed in 2013 by friends Avery Tucker and Harmony Tividad. Their self-titled debut EP "Girlpool" was released on Bandcamp in February 2014, and re-released on Wichita Recordings later that year.[4] The EP received generally favorable reviews from critics, with a weighted average score of 79 on Metacritic.[5] In his review of this EP, Chris Conaton compared their sound to "an angrier, socially conscious Kimya Dawson."[6]

On June 2, 2015, Girlpool released their debut album, Before the World Was Big, also on Wichita Recordings.[7] It also received generally favorable reviews from critics, with a 79 out of 100 score on Metacritic.[8] Pitchfork's Jayson Greene gave it a score of 7.8 out of 10 and described it as "a quiet album of uncommon intensity."[9]

In March 2017, Girlpool announced they had signed to Anti- Records, along with their second studio album and a United States tour.[10] On May 12, 2017, the band released their second studio album, Powerplant, via Anti-. The album received an 8.3 by Jillian Mapes on Pitchfork. Mapes described their new sounds as "echoing second-wave emo sourness ("Your Heart"), Britpop jangle ("She Goes By"), and classic alt-rock loud-quiet-loudness throughout".[11] In Summer 2017, Avery Tucker came out as a trans man.[12]

On February 1, 2018, Girlpool released "Picturesong" featuring Dev Hynes.[13] The band said about the song, "Picturesong is a word invented to explore what we create in each other when we want to feel deep love because of loneliness or otherwise, and brings into question the reality and delusion of the things we feel," Hynes said about making a song with Tucker and Tividad, "I’m such a fan of Girlpool, and loved working with them. Their harmonies are some of my favourites that are out there."[14] The song was initially released on SoundCloud, then on other streaming services a week later.

2018-2021: What Chaos Is Imaginary

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Avery Tucker
Harmony Tividad
Avery Tucker (top) and Harmony Tividad (bottom) in 2018

On October 9, 2018, the band released the singles "Lucy's" and "Where You Sink", their first release to feature Tucker singing much deeper than he did previously.[clarification needed][15] On November 13, 2018, Girlpool released the single "Hire", and announced their third studio album.[16] The album, titled What Chaos Is Imaginary, was released on February 1, 2019. It received generally favorable reviews, with an average score of 74 on Metacritic.[17] Sasha Geffen of Pitchfork said about the album, "Weaving in and out of concrete, direct, indie-rock songwriting and meditative, impressionistic dream pop, the record takes up more space than any of Girlpool’s previous music."[18]

On March 12, 2020, Girlpool released the single "Like I'm Winning It" and an accompanying music video. Tucker said about the song:

"‘Like I'm Winning It’ is about power and lust: How can the weight of someone’s attention feel so heavy just because of its scarcity? This is a song about playing with that line—the line between the electricity in receiving attention and what’s unattainable."[19]

Shortly after the release of the single, Tucker and Tividad were forced to self-isolate due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[20] On May 1, 2020, Girlpool released Chaos Demos, a collection of demos for songs from their previous studio album, on their Bandcamp. It included a write-up from Avery reflecting on making peace with who he used to be, and being a trans man in a band called Girlpool.[21][22] On August 31, 2020, the band released a remix EP titled Touch Me (It's Like I'm Winning It) featuring new versions of "Like I'm Winning It" by Porches, Lydia Ainsworth, and previous collaborator Dev Hynes.[23] In April 2021, Tividad appeared as a grocery store employee in the music video for "Posing in Bondage" by Japanese Breakfast.[24] She also appeared as a dancer in the music video for "Slumber Party" by Ashnikko in May.[25]

2021–2022: Forgiveness and split

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On December 8, 2021, Girlpool released the single "Faultline", alongside a self-directed video featuring Julian Klincewicz.[26][27]

On January 19, 2022, Girlpool released the song "Lie Love Lullaby" along with a music video directed by Amalia Irons.[28] The band also announced their fourth studio album Forgiveness, which released on April 29, 2022.[29] On February 23, Girlpool released the single "Dragging My Life Into a Dream", alongside a self-directed video.[30]

On August 25, Girlpool announced that they would breakup at the end of 2022, with their remaining tour dates serving as a farewell tour.[31]

2023–present: Solo work

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On August 25, 2023, Tividad released her debut solo EP Dystopia Girl under the mononymous name Harmony.[32] Harmony's debut album, Gossip, was released on October 11, 2024.[33] Tucker's debut album, Paw, is scheduled for release on October 10, 2025.[34]

Musical style and influences

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According to Timothy Monger of AllMusic: "The band grew from a sparse drummerless duo on their earliest albums into something resembling a more traditional indie rock act on subsequent records like 2019's What Chaos Is Imaginary, borrowing angst from '90s alternative guitar heroes and lush arrangements and bright harmonies from classic radio pop. They tipped the balance toward a glossier, more spacious keyboard pop by their fourth album, 2022's Forgiveness, which looked candidly at twentysomething relationship disappointments."[35] The Fader's Shaad D'Souza said that "Los Angeles duo Girlpool write songs about change, and the things we gain or leave behind when moving from one part of life to another."[36] Music critic Robert Christgau characterized the band's lyrics as "picking their way through a world that ain’t all that big no matter how scary."[37]

Tividad has cited alternative rock bands such as Cocteau Twins and Siouxsie and the Banshees as influences, as well as 2010s solo acts such as Charli XCX and Tyler, the Creator.[36] The band is also often compared to The Shaggs, a band notable for their perceived ineptitude at playing conventional rock music. In an article about the Shaggs, Matt McMahon from The Observer states: "The band most inspiring this spiritual connection [to The Shaggs] is Girlpool, a stripped back punk duo with a penchant for raw instrumentation and emotive harmonies".[38]

Band members

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Former members

  • Avery Tucker – guitar, bass guitar, vocals (2013–2022)
  • Harmony Tividad – bass guitar, guitar, vocals (2013–2022)

Former touring members

  • Miles Wintner – drums (2017)
  • Stephen Steinbrink – guitar (2017)[citation needed]
  • Kevin Boog – guitar (2018)[12]
  • Patrick Nolan – guitar, bass (2017–2022)
  • Sariah Mae – keyboards (2017–2022)
  • Ross Chait – drums (2017–2022)[12]

Discography

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Albums

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Studio albums

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Demo albums

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  • Chaos Demos (May 1, 2020, Self-released)

EPs

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  • Girlpool (November 2014, Wichita Recordings)
  • Touch Me (It's Like I'm Winning It) (August 2020, Anti-)[39]

Singles

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  • "Chinatown" (2015, Wichita Recordings)
  • "Picturesong" (2018, Anti-)
  • "Lucy's" (2018, Anti-)
  • "Where You Sink" (2018, Anti-)
  • "Hire" (2018, Anti-)
  • "Like I'm Winning It" (2020, Anti-)[40]
  • "Faultline" (2021, Anti-)
  • "Lie Love Lullaby" (2022, Anti-)
  • "Dragging My Life Into a Dream" (2022, Anti-)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Girlpool was an American indie rock band formed in Los Angeles, California, in 2013 by high school friends Avery Tucker and Harmony Tividad.[1] The duo initially built a reputation for their raw, lo-fi aesthetic centered on acoustic guitar, bass, and close vocal harmonies, capturing themes of youth, friendship, and introspection in short, direct songs.[1] Their self-titled debut EP arrived in 2014, followed by full-length albums that marked an evolution toward fuller instrumentation, including drums and electric guitars, while maintaining a punk-inflected intimacy.[2][3] Over nearly a decade, Girlpool released four studio albums—Before the World Was Big (2015), Powerplant (2017), What Chaos Is Imaginary (2019), and Forgiveness (2022)—each reflecting maturation in sound from minimalist folk-punk to more experimental indie pop.[3] Critics praised their songwriting for its emotional candor and harmonic interplay, though the band occasionally expanded to include additional touring or recording members.[1] In August 2022, Tucker and Tividad announced an indefinite hiatus, citing a decision to pursue separate paths as songwriters, with a final tour concluding that October.[4] This effectively marked the end of the project, amid Tucker embarking on a solo career.[5]

History

Formation and debut releases (2013–2015)

Girlpool formed in 2013 in Los Angeles, California, when teenage friends Cleo Tucker and Harmony Tividad began collaborating on music after meeting through mutual acquaintances and shared involvement in the local DIY scene, including frequent visits to the all-ages venue The Smell.[6][7] The duo, consisting of Tucker on guitar and vocals and Tividad on bass and vocals, adopted a minimalist setup eschewing drums in favor of raw, acoustic-leaning arrangements that emphasized vocal harmonies and interpersonal dynamics.[8][9] Their debut self-titled EP, Girlpool, was self-released via Bandcamp in early 2014, featuring seven tracks such as "Blah Blah Blah" and "Jane" that captured youthful introspection and punk-inflected simplicity.[2][10] The EP garnered underground attention within indie and punk circles, leading Wichita Recordings to reissue it on November 17, 2014, which broadened its distribution and reception.[11][12] In 2015, Girlpool released their debut full-length album, Before the World Was Big, on June 2 via Wichita Recordings, comprising 10 songs including "Ideal World" and "Chinatown" that expanded slightly on their lo-fi aesthetic while maintaining a focus on emotional directness and brevity—most tracks under three minutes.[13][14] The album's recording occurred partly in Los Angeles and Philadelphia, reflecting the duo's relocation eastward amid growing touring commitments in the DIY punk network.[15][16] This period marked their transition from local performances to national recognition, driven by the EP and album's alignment with indie rock's emphasis on authenticity over polish.[17]

Transition to fuller instrumentation and Powerplant (2016–2017)

Following the sparse acoustic arrangements of their debut album Before the World Was Big in 2015, Girlpool expanded their sound by incorporating electric guitars, bass, and drums, reflecting a maturation in their musical approach.[18][19] This shift aimed to add sonic urgency and depth, with Cleo Tucker writing drum parts to complement their dual guitar and vocal dynamic.[20] The duo began developing these fuller arrangements in 2016, moving away from their initial lo-fi, drummerless format to embrace grungier textures and collaborative instrumentation.[21][22] In August 2016, Tucker and Harmony Tividad recorded Powerplant over 10 days at Comp-ny Studios in Los Angeles, with producer Drew Fischer handling engineering and mixing.[23] The sessions marked the band's first use of percussion, featuring drums performed by Miles Wintner, which provided rhythmic drive without overshadowing their intertwined vocals and guitars.[24][25] This production approach allowed for a more layered sound, blending punk energy with indie rock elements across 11 tracks totaling approximately 28 minutes.[26] On March 6, 2017, Girlpool signed with Anti- Records and announced Powerplant, scheduling its release for May 12, 2017, accompanied by a U.S. tour.[27] The album debuted with previews of tracks like "123" and "Sleepless," showcasing the evolved instrumentation that propelled their transition to a fuller band aesthetic.[28] This period solidified their growth from intimate folk-punk duo to a more robust rock outfit, while retaining core harmonies central to their identity.[29]

What Chaos Is Imaginary and stylistic shifts (2018–2020)

On October 9, 2018, Girlpool released the singles "Lucy's" and "Where You Sink," marking their first material featuring Cleo Tucker's post-transition vocal range. On November 13, 2018, the band announced their third studio album, What Chaos Is Imaginary, scheduled for release on February 1, 2019, via Anti- Records, accompanied by the single "Hire."[30] The album comprises 11 tracks, including "Stale Device," "Pretty," "Chemical Freeze," and the title track, produced through a more independent process where Tucker and Harmony Tividad wrote separately while living in different East Coast cities before collaborating.[31] [32] The recording reflected a transitional phase, extending over a longer period than prior efforts and incorporating elements like drum machines, synthesizers, guitars, and a string octet, diverging from the punk roots evident in earlier releases.[32] Stylistically, What Chaos Is Imaginary built on the fuller instrumentation of 2017's Powerplant but shifted toward a more meditative and expansive sound, blending indie-rock structures with impressionistic dream pop, fuzzy distortion, and spacious arrangements that alternate between agitation and serenity.[33] [34] Tracks like "Hire" retain straight-ahead rock energy, while "Roses" evokes slowcore introspection, and the opener "Lucy's" deploys hefty, distorted guitar chords.[34] This evolution emphasized individual songwriting contributions over the duo's prior four-handed approach, resulting in multidimensional textures.[32] Tucker's gender transition, initiated after Powerplant and involving testosterone therapy, lowered his voice to a tenor range, introducing greater vocal friction and separation in harmonies with Tividad, moving away from the unison singing of their acoustic origins.[33] [34] This change, combined with Tividad's experiences with mental health challenges—such as the disconnection inspiring "Where You Sink"—infused the music with themes of personal transformation, grappling with past identities, loss, memory, isolation, and chaos validation through stream-of-consciousness lyrics.[32] [33] Songs like "Pretty" and the title track exemplify this, pondering becoming a new person amid lingering echoes of former selves.[33] The album received praise for its exploration of identity and sonic innovation, earning a 7.8/10 from Pitchfork for poignant surrealism, though touring in 2019 was limited by scheduling, with activities curtailed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[33] [35]

Forgiveness, internal tensions, and disbandment (2021–2022)

Girlpool's fourth studio album, Forgiveness, was released on April 29, 2022, through ANTI- Records, following its announcement on January 19, 2022.[36][37] The record, developed over several years after the duo's return to Los Angeles, featured tracks such as "Nothing Gives Me Pleasure," "Lie Love Lullaby," and "Violet," exploring themes of emotional reckoning and relational strain.[38] Avery Tucker described many of the songs as stemming from "relationship dynamics where I experienced frustration and pain," reflecting personal introspection amid the band's evolution.[39] On August 25, 2022, approximately four months after Forgiveness' release, Girlpool announced their disbandment, stating that after nine years together, they had decided "to take a break from Girlpool and go our separate ways as songwriters."[4] The duo framed the split as a mutual decision to pursue individual creative paths, with Tucker and Harmony Tividad affirming their ongoing support for each other as "their biggest fans."[40] This announcement came amid challenges including the ongoing impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on touring and financial viability for smaller acts, though no explicit interpersonal conflicts were cited as the cause.[41] The band's final activities included select North American tour dates designated as their last performances, with approximately two-thirds of scheduled shows canceled to align with the indefinite hiatus.[42][43] Final shows, such as their September 23, 2022, performance in New York City, evoked a sense of reluctant closure, marked by technical issues like onstage audio difficulties and an abrupt ending that mirrored the band's swift dissolution.[44] The disbandment effectively concluded Girlpool's collaborative run, shifting focus to Tucker and Tividad's solo endeavors thereafter.[45]

Solo careers post-disbandment (2023–present)

Following the amicable disbandment of Girlpool in August 2022, both Avery Tucker and Harmony Tividad pursued independent musical endeavors.[4] Harmony Tividad debuted her solo project under the moniker Harmony with the EP Dystopia Girl, released on August 25, 2023, via her own imprint Fantasy Corp.[46][47] The five-track EP featured singles including "Good Things Take Time," released in June 2023, and "Yesterday," which explored themes of personal absurdity and femininity.[47][48] Tividad followed this with her full-length album Gossip on October 25, 2024, characterized by experimental pop elements and avant-garde hyperpop influences.[49] Avery Tucker released his debut solo album Paw on October 25, 2024, following its announcement on July 26, 2024.[5][50] The nine-track record, self-produced and featuring contributions from artists such as Alaska Reid and Muna, included singles "Like I'm Young" and "Big Drops," emphasizing themes of self-discovery and raw honesty.[5][51][52]

Musical style

Core characteristics and evolution

Girlpool's foundational sound emerged as a sparse, lo-fi duo configuration, centered on acoustic guitar, bass, and the intertwined vocal harmonies of Cleo Tucker and Harmony Tividad, emphasizing raw emotional vulnerability and concise song structures typically under two minutes in length.[53][54] This setup, evident in their 2014 self-titled EP and 2015 debut album Before the World Was Big, drew from indie folk-punk traditions with minimal instrumentation, fostering an intimate, diary-like authenticity in delivery.[55][56] The duo's evolution accelerated with Powerplant in 2017, incorporating drums, electric guitars, and a fuller band dynamic while preserving core harmonic interplay and lyrical directness, shifting toward a more propulsive rock energy without drums in earlier works.[57][58][21] By What Chaos Is Imaginary (2019), the sound incorporated synths, drum machines, and dream-pop elements, blending concrete indie-rock riffs with impressionistic textures for a restless, expansive quality that shed initial amateurish charm in favor of polished experimentation.[33][34] This progression culminated in Forgiveness (2022), which fused amplified rock, synthesizers, and atmospheric layers, marking a deliberate broadening from duo austerity to multifaceted production while retaining thematic introspection.[59][60]

Influences and lyrical themes

Girlpool's musical influences draw from indie folk, lo-fi, and experimental rock traditions, emphasizing introspective songwriting and emotional depth. Harmony Tividad has praised Elliott Smith's Either/Or (1997) for its "unbelievable" lyrics, melodies, guitars, and harmonies, which shaped their approach to crafting vulnerable, melody-driven compositions.[61] Avery Tucker selected Arthur Russell's Love is Overtaking Me (2006) as particularly formative, noting its songs as "really informative" to their own writing process, while Tividad highlighted the lush production.[61] Other cited artists include Bright Eyes, Dear Nora, Vashti Bunyan's folk songwriting on Some Things Just Stick in Your Mind (2004), Duster's guitar-driven Contemporary Movement (2000), and The Beatles, reflecting a blend of confessional indie and eclectic experimentation.[62][61][63] Lyrically, Girlpool's work centers on raw vulnerability and personal introspection, often blending stream-of-consciousness reflections with direct examinations of emotional and relational experiences. Themes recurrently include identity transformation, the psychological weight of loss and memory, and the discomfort of personal transitions, as in lines grappling with past selves and self-forgiveness on tracks like "Hire" and "What Chaos Is Imaginary."[33] Their songs explore sexual dynamics—encompassing frustration, desire, vulnerability, rejection, and empowerment—alongside broader interpersonal tensions and self-doubt.[6] Existential queries about love, mortality, and exploration versus familiarity appear in early works, such as "Chinatown" and "Plants and Worms," underscoring a tension between comfort in the known and the pull of change.[64] The duo's lyrics also address societal expectations imposed on women, including feelings of confinement and slut-shaming, framed through lenses of self-love, acceptance, and relational autonomy, as evidenced in "Slutmouth."[65] Informed by their perspectives as queer artists, these themes extend to viewing queerness as a holistic "way of thinking" beyond sexuality alone, integrating odes to friendship, emotional honesty, and resistance to normative pressures.[66] This approach evolved from punk-inflected minimalism in their debut releases to more expansive meditations on growth and chaos in later albums, prioritizing genuine emotional exposure over polished narratives.[62][33]

Critical reception

Praise for innovation and intimacy

Critics lauded Girlpool's debut album Before the World Was Big (2015) for its raw intimacy, achieved through stripped-down acoustic arrangements and the duo's twinned vocals that evoke a direct, vulnerable connection, as if singing "in the center of an empty, well-lit room, staring directly at you."[67] The record's uncommon intensity stems from this exposure, with Harmony Tividad and Cleo Tucker embracing vulnerability in lyrics and delivery, making imperfections noticeable yet authentic.[67] Reviewers highlighted moments of offhand intimacy, such as in tracks reflecting personal reflections on youth and relationships.[68] With Powerplant (2017), Girlpool innovated by incorporating electric guitars, drums, and a fuller band setup, expanding their lo-fi folk roots into punk-inflected rock while retaining an intimate, lullaby-like fragility that belies the added volume.[69] This evolution drew praise for blending twee folk and ratty punk elements, evoking 1990s riot grrrl influences with millennial introspection, yet keeping the duo's voices central in their vulnerable expression.[69] Girlpool's third album What Chaos Is Imaginary (2019) further showcased innovation through expansive, surreal arrangements featuring drum machines, synth organs, and distortion-heavy guitars that weave indie-rock directness with impressionistic dream pop.[33] Despite these developments, the emotional core remained the intimacy of Tividad and Tucker's friendship, with baton-passing vocals and harmonic friction adding dimensionality to themes of personal transformation and loss.[33] Such praise underscores how the duo consistently prioritized emotional authenticity amid stylistic risks.

Criticisms of consistency and commercial viability

Critics have noted inconsistencies in Girlpool's stylistic evolution, particularly as the duo transitioned from minimalist acoustic folk-punk to more produced, genre-blending alt-rock, which sometimes resulted in albums lacking distinctiveness or cohesion. In a review of What Chaos Is Imaginary (2019), The Guardian argued that the band's adoption of a "more muscular approach" did them "few favours," describing the result as "unadventurous alt-rock by numbers" and suggesting they had "traded in what made them different" for a sound that failed to innovate beyond their earlier raw intimacy.[70] Similarly, Merry Go Round Magazine critiqued the album for its "lack of sonic exploration," where tracks "bleed together and fail to stand out on their own," with subtleties that were "sometimes too subtle," ultimately producing a listening experience that "fails to come together into a particularly gripping" whole despite "flashes of brilliance."[71] These perceived inconsistencies extended to Forgiveness (2022), their final album, where remote songwriting amid internal tensions contributed to a fragmented feel. Paste Magazine observed that the record found Tucker and Tividad "struggling to tie [songs] together," reflecting a disjointed process that mirrored their relational strains. PopMatters described it as "messy but rewarding," highlighting tracks like "Light Up Later" that "stick out" due to mismatched tones against the album's prevailing darkness, underscoring a lack of unified vision.[72][73] Regarding commercial viability, Girlpool's niche indie appeal limited broader success, culminating in practical setbacks like the cancellation of most 2022 tour dates after their August 25 breakup announcement, which truncated a planned North American farewell run starting September 6.[43][4] Despite critical praise for early works like Powerplant (2017), the band's experimental shifts did not translate to sustained audience growth or financial stability, as evidenced by the hiatus after nine years, with no major label crossover or chart penetration reported.[21] This aligns with indie rock's structural challenges, where stylistic inconsistency can hinder marketability in an era favoring predictable genres for streaming viability.

Members

Avery Tucker

Avery Tucker co-founded the indie rock duo Girlpool in 2013 with Harmony Tividad while both were teenagers in Los Angeles, California, after meeting at the DIY venue The Smell.[74][4] The pair began as an acoustic act, releasing their self-titled debut EP in 2014, which featured simple guitar-and-bass arrangements emphasizing intimate vocals and lyrics.[75] Born and raised in Los Angeles, Tucker showed early musical aptitude, persuading his parents for an acoustic guitar at age seven after seeing Joan Armatrading perform.[74] Within Girlpool, Tucker contributed as a lead vocalist, bassist, and guitarist, co-writing songs that explored themes of youth, friendship, and personal growth across the band's five albums.[74] The duo's sound expanded over time to incorporate drums, synthesizers, and fuller production, reflecting Tucker's multi-instrumental skills including piano and harmonica developed prior to the band's formation.[76] In 2018, Tucker publicly identified as a transgender man, a transition that coincided with Girlpool's stylistic shifts toward more experimental indie rock on albums like What Chaos Is Imaginary.[75][74] He continued performing and recording with the band until its disbandment in 2022, amid internal tensions and diverging artistic paths.[4]

Harmony Tividad

![Harmony Tividad](./assets/Girlpool_4167226391541672263915 Harmony Tividad is an American singer-songwriter and musician born on September 29, 1995, in Los Angeles, California.[77] She grew up in Hollywood and began her musical career in her teenage years, forming the indie rock duo Girlpool with childhood friend Cleo Tucker (later Avery Tucker) in 2013 after both quit their high school bands.[8] [21] The pair self-recorded their debut EP Girlpool that year, capturing raw acoustic performances at all-ages venues across Los Angeles, which established their minimalist folk-punk sound centered on personal introspection and relational dynamics.[1] In Girlpool, Tividad primarily handled lead vocals, guitar, and bass, contributing to the band's evolution from lo-fi duo acoustics to fuller electric instrumentation on albums like Before the World Was Big (2015) and Powerplant (2017).[78] [79] She co-wrote lyrics exploring themes of self-discovery, environmental interplay, and interpersonal tensions, often drawing from her California upbringing and observations of urban alienation.[80] Tividad's vocal style, marked by emotive delivery and harmonic interplay with Tucker, became a hallmark of the band's intimate, confessional aesthetic, as evidenced in tracks like "Ideal World" where she asserts command over vocal duties amid expanding production.[79] Tividad also pursued parallel solo endeavors during Girlpool's tenure, releasing unannounced albums such as The Manic in 2018, which showcased her experimental pop leanings outside the duo's punk framework.[81] Following Girlpool's disbandment in 2022 after nine years and four studio albums, she continued under the moniker Harmony, but her foundational role in the band's rise from DIY origins to critical acclaim on labels like Anti- remains central to her profile.[82]

Discography

Studio albums

Girlpool's debut studio album, Before the World Was Big, was released on June 2, 2015, through Wichita Recordings.[83] The record, recorded in Los Angeles, features acoustic instrumentation and themes of youth and introspection, marking the duo's transition from EP releases.[84] The follow-up, Powerplant, came out on May 12, 2017, on Anti- Records.[85] This album introduced electric guitars and drums, expanding the band's sound with louder, punk-influenced tracks while retaining vocal harmonies.[86] What Chaos Is Imaginary, their third studio album, was issued on February 1, 2019, also via Anti- Records in collaboration with Epitaph.[87] Produced with a fuller arrangement including bass and additional percussion, it explores existential and relational themes amid stylistic shifts toward noise rock elements.[31] The band's fourth and most recent studio album, Forgiveness, appeared on April 29, 2022, under Anti- Records.[88] Recorded after the duo's relocation back to Los Angeles, it delves into personal reconciliation and emotional rawness, featuring distorted guitars and collaborative production with Yves Rothman.[89]

Other releases

Girlpool's debut extended play, titled Girlpool, was initially self-released digitally on Bandcamp on November 17, 2014, and subsequently reissued physically and digitally by Wichita Recordings later that year.[2] [90] The seven-track EP, featuring songs such as "Blah Blah Blah", "Paint Me Colors", and "Slutmouth", marked the duo's earliest recorded output and established their initial lo-fi, acoustic sound.[2] [91] On May 1, 2020, the band released Chaos Demos via Bandcamp, comprising seven demo recordings of tracks that appeared on their 2019 album What Chaos Is Imaginary, including "Hire", "Lucy's", and "Where You Sink".[92] These versions highlight rawer, pre-production arrangements compared to the final album cuts.[92] The duo issued several standalone singles outside their studio albums, often as precursors to full releases or reworked material. Notable examples include "Where You Sink" and "Lucy's", released October 9, 2018, which originated as solo demos by Harmony Tividad and Cleo Tucker (later Avery Tucker) before being adapted for band performance.[57] "Hire" followed on November 13, 2018, serving as the lead single for What Chaos Is Imaginary.[93] Additional singles from later periods encompass "Nothing Gives Me Pleasure" (March 26, 2022), "Dragging My Life Into a Dream" (2022), and "Lie Love Lullaby" (2022), tied to promotion for Forgiveness.[94] "Faultline" appeared in 2021, and "Touch Me (It's Like I'm Winning It)" in 2020.[95] No official compilations or split releases have been documented.

References

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