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M(h)aol share new single with video 'I Miss My Dog' from new album 'Something Soft' out 16th May via Merge Records | Announce UK September Tour


 

M(h)aol share new single with video 'I Miss My Dog' from new album 'Something Soft'
Photo credit: Cait Fahey


M(h)aol

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Share new single 'I Miss My Dog'


New album Something Soft

out 16th May via Merge Records

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Announce September UK headline tour

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Releasing their highly anticipated new album Something Soft on 16th May via Merge Records, today M(h)aol share new single 'I Miss My Dog' that comes with a touching, band-made video featuring crowd-sourced clips of fans’ pets. The video is a heartfelt tribute to the dogs we’ve loved and lost, and the ones still with us.


Based in Dublin, Belfast, and London, Constance Keane (She/Her), Jamie Hyland (She/Her), and Sean Nolan (He/Him), have built a reputation for thrilling live performances, fostering an atmosphere that encourages community and catharsis regardless of where they play.


On the song, Constance Keane shares, “'I Miss My Dog' is a song about my dog Poppy, and the experience of losing a pet. She passed away in July last year, and I still sometimes wake up thinking she’s with us. I think losing a dog is something that people either understand or they don’t, and this is a song for those of us that do.”



M(h)aol are excited to announce new UK headline shows this September in support of Something Soft. To celebrate the release, the band will play a special in-store performance at Rough Trade East in London on 20th May, following their album release show at London's George Tavern on 16th May.


From the first note of Something Soft's opening track to the distorted cries of its last, the record feels antagonistic to the very concept of softness, sonically and thematically. It’s an unapologetic approach to intersectional feminism, animal welfare, consumerism, and the struggle to find a place in a world lacking in empathy.


Something Soft features a more urgent sound wound tightly around Hyland and Keane’s rhythm. On the already released singles ‘Pursuit’ and ‘Snare’, Keane’s vocals lock in on her drums, as if her words were stirred to life by her playing, issued directly from her body. Set against those respectively anxious and swaggering tracks, her voice occupies the space of an inner monologue narrating a tense walk home, and green room misogyny from a place of droll observance.


Like its predecessors Attachment Styles and the Gender Studies EP released via TULLE, Something Soft was recorded by Jamie Hyland (who has also worked with Gilla Band, Lambrini Girls’ acclaimed debut, The Psychotic Monks). It is the most technically nimble of M(h)aol’s recordings to date, with the band - joined by Pixie Cut Rhythm Orchestra’s Sarah Deegan on bass - decamping to Dublin’s Ailfionn Studio where they took advantage of the space and studio equipment to bring more nuance to their sound.


The polish serves to highlight M(h)aol’s roguish charms, making the intimate feel anthemic, using personal experience to detail the broader systems we live under. For those who’ve come to recognise themselves in their songs, listening to Something Soft is like jumping into a long-running chat thread, full of fury and humour.


Something Soft


out 16th May via Merge Records



­Tour Dates


17 Apr - Electric Brixon, London (Lambrini Girls)


16 May - The George Tavern, London


18 May - Le Botaniques, Brussels


20 May - Rough Trade East, London


28 May - The Black Box, Belfast (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


29 May - Sandinos, Derry (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


30 May - The Roisin Dubh, Galway (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


31 May - Kasbah Social Club, Limerick (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


1 June - Coughlans, Cork (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


2 June - Coughlans, Cork (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


3 June - Luca Records and Decks, Waterford (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


4 June - Whelan’s, Dublin (w/ Cola & Junk Drawer)


13 June - Pies Pala Pop, Rennes*


14th June - More Women On Stage, Paris*


17 Sep - Nice N Sleazy, Glasgow


18 Sep - Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh


19 Sep - Future Yard, Birkenhead


20 Sep - Headrow House, Leeds


23 Sep - Heartbreakers, Southampton


24 Sep - The Louisiana, Bristol


25 Sep - Rough Trade, Nottingham


26 Sep - Hare & Hounds, Birmingham


27 Sep - SOUP, Manchester

*Festival



­Something Soft


out 16th May 2025 via Merge Records


Tracklisting


01. Pursuit


02. I Miss My Dog


03. You Are Temporary, But the Internet Is Forever


04. DM:AM


05. E8/N16


06. Vin Disel


07. Clementine


08. Snare


09. IBS


10. 1800-Call-Me-Back


11. Coda



­Bio for M(h)aol:


Something Soft, the second full-length album by Irish post-punk firebrands M(h)aol, is anything but. From the first note of its propulsive opening track to the distorted cries of its last, Something Soft feels antagonistic to the very concept of softness, sonically and thematically, taking an unapologetic approach to intersectional feminism, animal welfare, consumerism, and the struggle to find a place in a world lacking in empathy. What M(h)aol offers is catharsis, in two forms: the kind you get from being open with others, and the kind you get from righteously smashing some shit up.

Effectively channeling rage and empathy is an act of resilience, and to make Something Soft, M(h)aol had to become especially resilient. Following their acclaimed debut Attachment Styles, M(h)aol’s line-up changed, settling on the core trio of Constance Keane (drums/vocals, she/her), Jamie Hyland (bass/vocals, she/her), and Sean Nolan (guitar, he/him). That process changed the band’s approach to songwriting and performing, resulting in an unexpected breakthrough where many groups have folded.


Something Soft features a more urgent sound wound tightly around Hyland and Keane’s rhythm. On songs like “Pursuit” and “Snare,” Keane’s vocals lock in on her drums, as if her words were stirred to life by her playing, issued directly from her body. Set against those respectively anxious and swaggering tracks, her voice occupies the space of an inner monologue narrating a tense walk home, and green room misogyny from a place of droll observance, a universal experience rendered in specific detail.

Like its predecessors Attachment Styles and the Gender Studies EP, Something Soft was recorded by Jamie Hyland. It is the most technically nimble of M(h)aol’s recordings to date, with the band—joined by Pixie Cut Rhythm Orchestra’s Sarah Deegan on bass—decamping to Dublin’s Ailfionn Studio where they took advantage of the space and studio equipment to bring more nuance to their sound. The additional sessions and prowess behind the boards were a boon, but for a band used to operating under extreme time constraints, this presented an unexpected challenge: Could M(h)aol keep the sense of immediacy that had marked their music up to that point?

Songs like “ quickly dispelled that worry, blooming into life in 20 minutes from a drone Nolan was playing while Hyland set up her recording equipment, racing to capture the song once Keane and Deegan joined in. One of Something Soft’s ghosting anthems, “1800-Call-Me-Back,” began as a joke that the band should write a football chant, but it became far more complex—the delicious balance of chaos and clarity they struck would have been impossible without time. “I Miss My Dog” is less off-the-cuff, but its meditation on grief builds up at a breakneck pace, from feedback to Keane’s drumming and singing to a spectacular conclusion that smothers that grief in bass and guitar, one of M(h)aol’s greatest technical achievements to date.

The polish serves to highlight M(h)aol’s roguish charms, making the intimate feel anthemic, using personal experience to detail the broader systems we live under. For those who’ve come to recognize themselves in M(h)aol’s songs, listening to Something Soft is like jumping into a long-running chat thread, full of fury and humor. For those who haven’t, the door is open—Something Soft’s thrills often turn on a dime towards introspection, as in “Snare” where Keane’s response to the question “Why not play something soft like piano or violin?” resolves itself to one of her Did you ask him too?” It’s not a lecture or a snide rebuke but something much more deft: an invitation to see the world for what it really is, starting with the listener.






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