News

Harmony Tividad lets Lifetime turn leaving into a long emotional apprenticeship

By Editorial Team - June 26, 2026

Sponsored Content
Harmony Tividad lets Lifetime turn leaving into a long emotional apprenticeship

Summary

Harmony Tividad releases Lifetime via KRO Records, her debut solo album after Girlpool, following the vulnerable single I’m Still Learning How To Leave You.

Key Facts

  • Category: News
  • Published: June 26, 2026
  • Tags: harmony tividad, lifetime, girlpool, kro records, indie pop, dream pop, Dream Pop / Indie Pop

Harmony Tividad’s Lifetime arrives on 26 June via KRO Records, opening a solo chapter after Girlpool with the kind of title that suggests both scale and patience. Earlier single I’m Still Learning How To Leave You framed the record as a study of emotional self-sufficiency, heartbreak, boundaries and the exhausting desire to protect people from themselves. That is heavy territory, but Tividad’s writing has always worked best when the feeling is direct rather than melodramatic. Recorded with Yves Rothman at Sunset Sound, the album promises a metamorphosis of identity across twelve tracks, moving at some distance from Girlpool while still carrying the intimacy that made that band resonate in the first place. Lifetime sounds like a record about leaving as process rather than event: messy, slow, necessary and sometimes only visible after the song has already ended.

Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content