Avery Tucker Goes Raw On Paw
On his moody solo debut, the Girlpool vocalist burrows himself deeper into the grungier side of his former band’s versatile indie-rock sound.

It’s been three years since Girlpool, the DIY indie-rock duo fronted by Avery Tucker and Harmony Tividad, went their separate ways. Though their breakup was amicable, their disbanding is still deeply felt. The two built a niche yet passionate following since their start, emerging with compellingly lo-fi and small-scale ambitions on 2014’s Before the World Was Big and 2017’s Powerplant before evolving into more serious and exploratory territory on 2019’s What Chaos Is Imaginary and 2022’s Forgiveness. Keeping everything glued together was Tucker and Tividad’s ironclad bond as vocalists, songwriters, and friends. Even when Tucker transitioned in 2017 and his voice subsequently dropped, such a change managed to give even greater range and depth to their dynamic, with Tucker’s unwavering Elliott Smith-like tenor balancing ably against Tividad’s light, pleasant coo.
After their split, which was precipitated by Tucker’s desire to make music on his own, it remained to be seen just what exactly the two would do without each other. Tividad went in an unexpected direction, axing off her last name and going hyperpop on her solo debut, last year’s Gossip. Despite her admirable attempt to stray away from what people would expect from her post-Girlpool, the album itself felt disappointingly shallow, a gimmicky pastiche of recession-era club pop lensed through 2020s brainrot. Tucker, on the other hand, went in the opposite direction, burrowing himself deeper in the grungy, raw side of Girlpool’s versatile sound for his solo LP Paw. The album retains traces of the cozy, delicate production and observational, intimate lyrics that characterized the Girlpool aesthetic, but the grief and earnestness bubbling underneath Tucker’s stylistic touches establish his artistic aspirations a little more clearly and effectively than his former bandmate.
Paw has a haunted, earthy quality fitting for an autumnal release, its country-tinged guitar riffs and shoegaze-adjacent ambiance viscerally reflecting the melancholy that defines the season, as well as the Montana setting where part of the album was recorded. Tucker grounds his misty, wistful sonic landscape with the sheer power of his voice, oscillating between a whispery snarl and a full-throated yelp, often in the same song. That mix of grit and vulnerability extends to the complicated feelings Tucker wrestles with throughout the record: self-criticism, dissolved connections, and the painful pull of the past. In a way, Paw acts as a solemn epilogue to Forgiveness, which explored similar themes and also carried a mournful tone but experimented a bit more with its production. On Paw, Tucker stands firmly and confidently in the plaintive, edgy tone of his work, confronting his demons head-on and letting the messy emotional residue wash over him.