synecdoche new york’s 2024 self-titled debut was meant to be a one-off upload, quickly recorded as a low-stakes riff on the work of then-ascendant slowcore revivalists like sign crushes motorist and flyingfish. The Chicago act’s sole, anonymous member didn’t consider it a fully fledged project until they checked Spotify a year later and discovered that their song “when you call” had its play count inflated overnight after it landed on the same slowcore playlists they’d been drawing from in half-earnest.
Despite crisp, sped-up vocals and splashy drum programming, SNY’s first work felt more aligned with the hushed and cathartic songwriting of late ’90s bands like Wheat and Hood than with their contemporaries’ numbed soundtracks for trawling Pinterest. Tracks like “my age for once” housed subtle heartache beneath warble and hiss, with multi-tracked harmonies and scuffed-up pitch bends undergirding vulnerable disclosures like “I got myself an animal, and I’m scared that it’ll die because I’m dumb.” Capitalizing on their new audience, synecdoche new york resumed operations in 2026 with a pair of EPs—March’s you know who you are and the brand-new meanderings—that embrace more sophisticated songwriting and a wider sonic palette.
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Where you know who you are strayed from the tape-degraded tropes of nu-slowcore in favor of clean yet atavistic laptop pop, à la Beach Fossils’ What a Pleasure, meanderings gets deep under the hood and tunes up the technical elements of SNY’s craft. They still prize intimacy, but have also learned to tessellate contrasting textures and harmonies into denser arrangements. The guitars act more like scaffolding, ceding expressive space to sustained synth pads and stacks of backing vocals deployed at pivotal moments. “1 track mind” has a case for catchiest SNY song solely on the strength of its cute vocal toplines, but its barely perceptible layers of refracted drones and metallic scrapes make the hooks feel downright overwhelming. “i’ll always know” tees up its beat drops like a playset-sized facsimile of stadium rock, bridged by a hi-hat loop and misty keys in the style of Heart’s “These Dreams.” Each of these cuts is a little more dynamic than your typical slowcore offering, classic or contemporary, while grounded by simple, slightly muffled rhythm sections and unpretentious writing.
While hybridity reigns supreme among bedroom artists, meanderings is a laptop outing that’s refreshingly coherent—not because it sounds like a curated, fashionable moodboard, but because its songs are engrossed in romance and raw longing. By going all-in on big feelings and using loud-soft dynamics to match, SNY’s latest release is poignant from back to front. They’re living fully in dreams.

