Japanese post-rock band Mono announce new album Snowdrop, a record built around the language of flowers and conceived for those who have lost someone dear.
“For this album, we incorporated the messages imbued in flowers given to those who have passed into the titles of our songs,” the band explain. “Our hope is that this album serves as a source of light and hope for those who have lost someone dear.”
Latest single ‘Gerbera’ is out now. “The language of flowers for the ‘Gerbera’ is faithful love and cheerfulness,” the band say. “The countless, precious memories I share with you will never be forgotten. I am so glad that I met you. Innocence, purity, joy, beauty, and I will never forget your smile.”
Video director Yusaku Mitsuwaka added: “During the shoot, the wind swayed the silver grass wildly, resonating with the band’s performance and blowing through as if it were music itself. Guided by the wind, the camera danced, and ‘Gerbera’ became a music video brimming with vitality. I hope this wind reaches the heavens.”
Previous single ‘Winter Daphne’ is also available, the band describing its flower language as “the final surge of life, glory and eternity,” a moment where “you transformed into light, departing peacefully for heaven.”
Snowdrop is the band’s first album made with Brad Wood (Touché Amore, The Smashing Pumpkins), following the passing of their longtime collaborator and friend Steve Albini. When Mono recorded their previous album, Oath, with Albini in 2023, they never imagined it would be the final studio album they made together. Albini died the following year, a loss that left an incalculable void for everyone who knew him and everyone attached to the thousands of records he helped bring into the world across four decades.
Albini had become a fundamental part of Mono‘s unmistakable sound, and the thought of replacing him was daunting. Wood was chosen for his familiarity with the band’s working process and his decades-long friendship with Albini. He entered Albini’s storied Electrical Audio studios in September 2025 to record Snowdrop, again working with Chicago conductor and orchestral director Chad McCullough, who brought a 10-piece orchestra and an 8-piece choir to the album’s eight pieces. Recording in the same space where most of Mono‘s records were made across their quarter-century history, then mixed by Wood at his Seagrass home studio in Los Angeles, the album is equally intimate and enveloping.
Where there could easily be a pall hanging over Snowdrop, there is instead an extraordinary air of gratitude. Rather than steep in heartache, it finds a poignant appreciation for a life well-spent with a dear friend, turning shock and sadness into hope and wonder.
Snowdrop features the tracks ‘Snowdrop’, ‘Winter Daphne’, ‘Gerbera’, ‘Statice’, ‘Herdera’, ‘Shion’, ‘Bells of Ireland’ and ‘Farewell to Spring’. It can be ordered here.
Mono are currently touring Asia, with an extensive European tour to follow in 2027 and dates in Australia. They take in just one UK date, at the Electric Ballroom in London on 20th February 2027.
