Following the recent news that they have joined the Ghostly International family, TOPS announce details of a forthcoming new album, Bury the Key, due for release on August 22. The announcement comes accompanied by a brand new single and tour dates across the UK, Europe and North America.
TOPS — musicians Jane Penny, David Carriere, Marta Cikojevic and Riley Fleck — write timeless music that reliably threads immediacy and depth. Bury the Key, their first full-length since 2020 and with new label home Ghostly International, is a captivating reintroduction for the Montréal band: ever refined, undoubtedly masters of their melodic craft yet unafraid of evolving and testing themselves against different, at times darker tones.
The album faces feelings once locked away, engaging the give-and-take between happiness, hedonism, and self-destruction. While often inhabited by fictional figures, their glowing, grooving, self-produced songs draw from personal observations: intimacy (both inside and outside the band), toxic behavior, drug use, and apocalyptic dread. When recording started, they noticed a shift and leaned in, jokingly dubbed “evil TOPS,” says Penny. “We’re always kind of seen as a soft band or like naive or friendly in a Canadian way, but we made it a challenge to really channel the world around us.” Through the lens of a looming epoch and the clarity that comes with age, TOPS dip into a more sinister disco realm with Bury the Key, giving their soft-focus sophisti-pop a sharpened edge.
Today the band share the album’s centrepiece with new single ‘Chlorine,’ an “empty love” ballad that crosses toxins, the nostalgia of chemical-filled waterparks, and the comfort of an unhealthy bar night.
Jane explains: “At one point I was caught in a cycle of going out to the bar hoping that I would cross paths with a certain person who was not good for me but who I felt irresistibly drawn to. I grew up in Edmonton, Alberta, where it’s very cold and I used to go to the pool a lot in the winter. It’s also where I first started going to bars to drink with my friends. I was thinking about alcohol and chlorine both being poison, thinking about all the people that I’ve tried to be close to that have ended up being bad for me, how I still love them all, and I wrote the song ‘Chlorine.'”
Bury the Key:
- Stars Come After You
- Wheels at Night
- ICU2
- Outstanding in the Rain
- Annihilation
- Falling on my Sword
- Call You Back
- Chlorine
- Mean Streak
- Your Ride
- Standing at the Edge of Fire
- Paper House
