Album artwork for Losing, Linda by Sui Zhen
Album artwork for Losing, Linda by Sui Zhen
Album artwork for Losing, Linda by Sui Zhen

Albums by Melbourne-based artist Sui Zhen unfold like narratives from a dream — incredibly vivid (if slightly off-kilter) and revealing of deep personal truths. Her surreal synth-pop culls inspiration from bossa nova, Japanese city pop and the early electronic music of the 1980s, and is also interspersed with atmospheric soundscapes and spoken-word dance. Following her 2016 breakout Secretly Susan, she returns with a new long-player, Losing, Linda. It's an album about loss, both on the personal level (documenting the tragic loss of her mother in 2018) and on a broader, societal scale (the loss of selfhood in the digital age). Losing, Linda is a trip through the real and the uncanny — a lovingly personal and humanistic document of our ever-changing world, the things we lose along the way, and the insights we gain from loss itself.

Sui Zhen

Losing, Linda

Cascine
Album artwork for Losing, Linda by Sui Zhen
CD

$12.99

Released 09/27/2019Catalog Number

CD-CSN-120

Learn more
Album artwork for Losing, Linda by Sui Zhen
LP +

$21.99

Includes Poster

Yellow Vinyl

Released 09/27/2019Catalog Number

LP-CSN-120

Learn more
Sui Zhen

Losing, Linda

Cascine
Album artwork for Losing, Linda by Sui Zhen
CD

$12.99

Released 09/27/2019Catalog Number

CD-CSN-120

Learn more
Album artwork for Losing, Linda by Sui Zhen
LP +

$21.99

Includes Poster

Yellow Vinyl

Released 09/27/2019Catalog Number

LP-CSN-120

Learn more

Albums by Melbourne-based artist Sui Zhen unfold like narratives from a dream — incredibly vivid (if slightly off-kilter) and revealing of deep personal truths. Her surreal synth-pop culls inspiration from bossa nova, Japanese city pop and the early electronic music of the 1980s, and is also interspersed with atmospheric soundscapes and spoken-word dance. Following her 2016 breakout Secretly Susan, she returns with a new long-player, Losing, Linda. It's an album about loss, both on the personal level (documenting the tragic loss of her mother in 2018) and on a broader, societal scale (the loss of selfhood in the digital age). Losing, Linda is a trip through the real and the uncanny — a lovingly personal and humanistic document of our ever-changing world, the things we lose along the way, and the insights we gain from loss itself.