Artist's albums
It Was Love
2022 · single
Here Comes the Sun
2020 · album
Here Comes the Sun #1 (Radio Edit)
2020 · single
Linda Says
2020 · single
Give Each Other Some Solace
2017 · album
All Alone
2017 · single
DCI Gates
2017 · single
Fatima Says (Sarto Remix)
2016 · single
In the City
2015 · album
Tanita Yo
2015 · single
Oh Stampe, Oh Stella
2014 · single
I Wouldn't Know What to Do
2007 · single
Here Comes the Future
2007 · album
(Lack Of) Love Will Tear Us Apart
2007 · single
My Apologies
2005 · single
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Biography
Part of the uncannily bountiful Gothenburg, Sweden, music scene of the late 2000s, the Honeydrips is the one-man project of Mikael Carlsson, a former member of the punky pop band Dorotea and the wistful Kissing Mirrors. Frequently compared to fellow Gothenburgers Jens Lekman (a sometime tourmate) and the Tough Alliance (on whose Sincerely Yours imprint he releases his records), Carlsson shares both artists' playfully romantic sensibility and their tendency for winking, omnivorous appropriation of pop music and culture, past and present. His influences are many and manifest -- at one point, his MySpace Top Eight friends list included Felt, Dusty Springfield, the Clash, Doris Day, A Tribe Called Quest, Claudine Longet, Orange Juice, and Jimmy Cliff, all of whom are valid reference points to a greater or lesser extreme; Felt in particular -- but his music is neither overly gimmicky nor eclectic for the sake of eclecticism, since it's all grounded by Carlsson's classicist indie pop songwriting. After a sporadic series of CD-Rs, MP3s, and a 2005 7" single on Smashing Time Records, the Honeydrips' debut album, Here Comes the Future, arrived in 2007. Including the singles "(Lack Of) Love Will Tear Us Apart" and "I Wouldn't Know What to Do" (whose B-sides included remixes from yet more city-mates, the Embassy and the Field), it was awarded the Manifest Prize (an alternative Swedish Grammy) for Pop/Electronica Album of the Year. ~ K. Ross Hoffman, Rovi