The Breakdown
Every album needs a portal. The Prize, the radiant debut from Prima Queen, opens with “Clickbait”—a shimmering 40 seconds of ambient fog, like the band’s way of saying: “Give us a moment, we’re about to turn on the lights.” What follows is something both starry-eyed and deeply grounded: a collection of songs that walk hand in hand with heartbreak, sisterhood, and strangely specific memories (Flying Ant Day, anyone?). The Prize isn’t just an indie pop album—it’s a diary scrawled in eyeliner, passed between best friends, and left out in the rain. And somehow, it still glows.
The transatlantic duo—Louise Macphail and Kristin McFadden—formed Prima Queen across oceans and time zones, and the record feels like the culmination of that long-distance devotion. Recorded in late 2023 with Steph Marziano (whose touch is as subtle as it is transformative), The Prize doesn’t just tell their story—it sonically mirrors the emotional range of a decade-long friendship. There’s joy here, and ache, and a deep belief that the personal is worth mythologizing. You can hear the ghosts of green rooms, tour buses, and shared flats in every chord.
Musically, Prima Queen are hard to pin down—in the best way. “Mexico” opens the record proper like a song waking up slowly, unfurling into a gorgeously scruffy piece of indie pop. “Oats (Ain’t Gonna Beg)” struts around in worn leather boots, half-spoken, half-sung, like a friend giving you the hard truth over a pint. “Flying Ant Day” is sun-dappled and harmony-rich, a jangly sigh of a song that somehow feels like a memory you didn’t know you had. Even when the band brushes up against shoegaze or post-punk (“Ugly” stumbles gloriously into the shadows), they never lose that melodic magnetism. The choruses bloom, always.
Lyrically, The Prize is stitched together with a kind of casual poetry. Prima Queen doesn’t shout their cleverness—they hum it under their breath, trusting you’ll lean in. On “Meryl Streep,” the guitar and vocal almost argue until the chorus kicks in like a cinematic swell. “Spaceship” floats in indie-folk stardust, while “Fool” bounces with bittersweet immediacy. “Woman and Child” brings a buzzsaw riff but still finds time for wistfulness; “Sunshine Song” is a lullaby for when the world’s falling apart. Even the heartbreak of “More Credit” doesn’t ask for pity—it just unfolds gently, gorgeously, like someone telling you the truth at 3 a.m.
The Prize is more than a debut—it’s a carefully constructed world, warm with fingerprints, layered with friendship, and bristling with hooks. It’s a record that understands what it is to outgrow yourself, fall apart, and piece yourself back together with a little glitter and a lot of honesty. Prima Queen don’t just write indie rock songs—they build little shelters in them. You’d be lucky to find yourself inside one.
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