Arlo Parks Peers Into Our Hearts and Diaries in 'My Soft Machine'
Photo: Alex Waespi
As we enter an era dismantling harsh labor and false digital lives while glorifying living softly and honestly, Arlo Parks is soundtracking our spiritâs return home. Her highly-anticipated sophomore album, My Soft Machine is a brave and delicate prose that peers into all of our hearts and diaries.
Describing the process as a âpainful inner diving,â itâs evident Parks used shards of her own bones to build this indie-pop project. Itâs a raw look into where her mind, body, and soul live in reaction to heartbreak, curiosity, trauma, friendship, and feeling lost in the same place you were once found. My Soft Machine honors the light, the dark, and the undeniably human.
An interlude-length intro that launches you into the depths of this project, âBruiselessâ is the pain that comes from longing for a time when innocence was still accessible. âIâm Sorryâ is another particularly humanizing track, apologizing for not finding solace in healthy coping mechanisms, preferring to live numbed. The guilt bred from not doing life correctly is a unifying feeling, and Parks manages to speak to it while remaining ethereal and deeply intoxicative.
The album continues to explore more internal crevices, but the full magic of this project is yet to be experienced. As she gears up with her fall UK / EU tour, itâs no secret that the live shows are where My Soft Machine will truly come alive. Thereâs an intimacy this album begs for, and Parks has proven time and time again that being on stage is a sacred practice she deeply values, making every individual in a sold-out venue feel seen.
My Soft Machine catalyzes another level in Parksâ artistry. She described the album release to be emotionally tumultuous, sharing âIâm giddy, Iâm crying, Iâm grinning, Iâm throwing myself around this apartment, Iâm on fire, Iâm terrified, Iâm feeling everything right nowâ via Instagram. Itâs the only reaction suitable for a project this bare, and a clear indication sheâs putting out work that deeply matters.
Listen to my soft machine below: