Ivy – Traces Of You

Ivy, the iconic 90’s trio formed in 1994, have released their first new album in 12 years, built from the ground up using demos and song fragments dating from between 1995 to 2012, Traces of You is out now via Bar/None Records.

“Traces Of You is the album we never knew we needed to make. It’s been a gift to have discovered old unfinished ideas we did with our bandmate Adam Schlesinger. It’s been even more of a gift to have had the chance to finish them recently and now be able to present them for you. We hope you’ll enjoy hearing pieces of our past and glimpses of our future as we continue our musical journey.
Love,
IVY”
Ivy includes Andy Chase, Dominique Durand, and the late Adam Schlesinger. Sadly, Durand and Chase assumed that Ivy was in the rearview after Schlesinger tragically passed away from COVID-19 in 2020. While prepping recent reissues of their back catalog, the band unearthed a trove of reel-to-reel tapes and old hard drives stored in their Rhode Island studio. The duo knew they would only consider working on Ivy demos featuring Schlesinger, but they were overwhelmed by deciding which songs to finish. In response, they reached out to Ivy’s backing keyboardist and guitarist, Bruce Driscoll, to help go through the archives and revive these lost recordings.
Every song on Traces of You features contributions from Schlesinger, with the blessing of his family. The resulting music possesses the twinkling magic of Ivy’s classic work, paired with the kind of emotional wisdom gleaned from surviving life’s most challenging moments. They’ve shared a fourth music video for album highlight “Mystery Girl,” an intoxicating pop song paired with a haunting visual in which a photo of Schlesinger lingers in the background.
From their 1995 debut Realistic on forward, Ivy specialized in chic pop music brimming with empathy and gorgeous textures. Their six studio albums featured exquisite arrangements and influences: 1997’s Apartment Life was an indie-pop classic; 2000’s Long Distance incorporated trip-hop and a Stereolab-esque electronic sheen; and 2005’s In the Clear was a glowing synth-pop opus. Along the way, Ivy dabbled in the film world, contributing a cover of Steely Dan’s “Only a Fool Would Say That” to the movie Me, Myself & Irene and scoring the film Shallow Hal, among others.
Over the years, a new generation of artists discovered Ivy, citing them as a major inspiration and influence, recognizing the cinematic nature of Durand’s vocals, and the band’s airtight arrangements and airy dreampop sound. These include some of indie’s biggest names (Snail Mail, Beach Fossils) and emerging artists who are making huge waves in 2025 (Momma, Slow Pulp, Wishy, DJ Python).
Last month, Ivy announced Traces of You with lead single “Say You Will,” which comes paired with a new music video.
They followed it last month with the introspective “Fragile People.”
The instant classic “Heartbreak” features a brass section and invokes the classic “Ivy sound” of their early records.
The band broke their years long silence in late 2021 to honor the passing of Schlesinger, compiling home videos from studio sessions and those early tours in memory of their friend and bandmate into a moving tribute video. Over the last few years, they’ve reissued Realistic, Apartment Life, and Long Distance, including rare demos and unreleased music with each release.
Understandably, recording without Schlesinger was often an emotional experience, with Durand citing “Fragile People” especially as a tune that brought her and Chase to tears in the studio. “Unintentionally, the song stirred up something really melancholy for us— in a very specific way—about Adam,” she says. She notes that Ivy didn’t want to lean on cliches about losing Adam when writing lyrics. “It’s influenced by the loss of someone like him, but we did it in a way that’s very subtle,” she says. “There’s a ghostly feeling in the meaning of the lyrics.”
Poignantly, Traces Of You ends with “Hate That It’s True.” An aching pop song about the pain of unresolved grief and the power of eternal love, it’s dominated by a melancholy Schlesinger acoustic guitar and Driscoll, Chase and Durand whispering incantations of affection. In the end, the album honors Schlesinger’s musical talents and creativity—but just as much magnifies the magic of Ivy, and the indelible chemistry and spirit that can’t be broken by space or time.
“You can imagine how terrible it’s been to lose Adam,” Chase says. “The only silver lining is that we could breathe life into these songs that he contributed to and it was a great experience making this record happen. It was some of the most fun I’ve ever had, working on music with Dominique and Bruce.”
“It was also bittersweet,” he adds. “But what was nice about the bittersweetness was that I wasn’t alone in feeling that way. We all did. We were like a school of fish— three little fish, missing that fourth fish, all swimming in perfect union with each other, going through both the highs and lows.”
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