09/05/2025
Syko Friend “Dizzy Magic” is out today. Everywhere you listen to music and on limited edition vinyl (at the best shops in the world).
Do yourself a favor and listen up, it’s a powerful record.
Imagine a circuit. A closed shape, carved pathway across components and obstacles, this signal yielding a set of tones, new sounds and subtle interactions, noisy strings and hard-panned vocals holding solid before whoosh—something changes. A low note lifts and glides away. Just that quick, you are inside a song.
Dizzy Magic is Sophie Weil’s fourth LP as Syko Friend, the solo guise that’s codified her output through a decade-plus of operations in the latter-day USA underground—itself a classification so vague and genre-blurred that it’d be almost meaningless if not for the way Weil’s project has done continuous honor to certain clarifying commitments: guitars and amps, feedback and lyrics, free composition and locked-in songcraft. In its twin entanglements with tradition and experimentation, its richly organic sonic palette, and its effortless intimacy, the music of Syko Friend is instantly recognizable. Put one of her records on and you get it.
On Dizzy Magic, Weil has maintained those parameters but refined them, tightening the studiocraft and expanding arrangements into dreamily broad-spectrum events, feelings rendered sharp and detailed, whether it’s a solo guitar ride or one of several full-band stompers featuring additional instrumental contributions by Evan Burrows, Hank Doyle, and Henry Barnes. This record is clear-eyed as it reaches previously unseen expanses, a grand gesture in touch with its smallest components. It’s a testament to Weil’s devotion to continuous exploration; to the cathartic capacities of guitar music; and to the collaborations and efforts of writing, recording, and touring that underlie the ongoing push for self-expression on the margins.