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  • CMAT Releases New Album “EURO-COUNTRY”

  • Irish singer-songwriter Ciara Mary-Alice Thompson, aka CMAT released her third studio album “EURO-COUNTRY” along with a new music video for “When a Good Man Cries” directed by Eilís Doherty on August 29, 2025 via CMATBaby and AWAL.


    This marks her first album in two years since the 2023 album “Crazymad, for Me”.
    The album comprises 12 tracks, produced by Oli Deakin.
    She recorded the album in New York and explores themes of loss and pain and grief with Ireland and her relationship on the album.

    CMAT said of the album, “I wrote it kind of early to mid last year, 2024 when I was on tour, in between everything. And it's a very heavy record. It deals with a lot of like, loss and pain and grief, and is kind of centered around my relationship with Ireland and kind of exploring, like modern capital isolation and like how the girlies are dealing under these current times that we're in. And it just I wasn't planning on making another record so quickly I wanted to take a break. And then a lot of really sad things happened last year, and it just felt like I had this new sense of urgency, and I wanted to talk about what's happening now. So I made the record. I recorded it in New York between September and December last year. I went a bit crazy. Didn't really see any daylight much of it. It was kind of hallucinating things by the end there love the crazy. Love voices in the head. But it was, I'm really, really proud of it, but I think I kind of slide it.”
  • She said in a statement, “EURO-COUNTRY is, I think, the best thing I have ever made. I felt halfway through recording it was the most important record I've made for myself... mainly because it was making me go crazy. I'm always going to make the work I want to make, because there is a little gremlin in my head that tells me if it's shit. More than success, there's a bigger gremlin that wants me to make music that's really good. She's brutal and has ruined my life at times, but she is the keeper of my life and she's always right.”

    She told Apple Music, “I didn't think I was going to make another record so quickly, and when all these ideas started landing, I knew I needed to do this before I could do anything else. It was a very hard album to make for a number of reasons, and it's a very heavy subject matter. What we were trying to pull off was so difficult that I had a really hard time making it. But that being said, I'm really proud of it. I think this album was born of grief and loss and sadness and stuff, and things being put into perspective for me in a way that they hadn't been before. All of this suffering I endured making it, and now I'm bearing the fruits.”


  • CMAT explained track-by-track for the album via Apple Music.

    “Billy Byrne from Ballybrack, the Leader of the Pigeon Convoy”
    “I definitely needed something to open up the record that wasn't my voice. A lot of this album is criticizing Ireland, which is something I love more than anything else in the world. So, I wanted something that captured my love for it and to show people I wasn't coming from a snotty place. One day, I randomly came across a documentary, and this scene happened. Billy Byrne is about to free a lot of pigeons, and this is a phone call that he makes from a telephone box that's in the middle of a beach. He sums up everything that I love about Ireland: its weirdness, its beauty, and its warmth.”

    “EURO-COUNTRY
    “'EURO-COUNTRY' is a bit of a Frankenstein song—I wrote bits of this years ago for a completely different thing. I knew the album was going to be called EURO-COUNTRY and then I thought, 'I'd love a title track for this record.' Usually, it's the other way around. The line 'I feel like Kerry Katona' came because I have a real fascination with beautiful blondes who are destroyed by the press. I've written about Princess Diana and Anna Nicole Smith in the past, and I think Kerry is another one of those women that was rinsed by the British press, completely fucking unfairly. I really do admire her, and I think she's very strong.”

    “When a Good Man Cries”
    “I'm really glad the way those two songs run into each other. That's one of the most successful bits of the album. I needed to go full country immediately, so everyone knew what the record was. This is me going in on myself because I made an ex-partner cry. He hadn't done anything wrong. There's this thing in third-wave feminism, which is, I feel, now outdated, where women should be like men. Making a man cry is turning a trope on its head. I repeat 'Kyrie Eleison' ['Lord have mercy'] over and over again at the end, which is a reference to my favorite song of all time, 'The Donor' by Judee Sill, in which she's begging God for another chance to become a good person.”

    “The Jamie Oliver Petrol Station”
    “'The Jamie Oliver Petrol Station' is a meditation on irrational hatred and intolerance. It's based around me getting annoyed every time I saw a poster of Jamie Oliver because when we were on tour, we'd eat a lot of sausage rolls from his branded delis. I don't actually have any beef with Jamie Oliver, so I'm kind of like, 'Ciara, you need to stop being a bitch. He's got kids.' And then there's a stream-of-consciousness section in the bridge where I'm going through my own history to try and figure out how I became such a bitch. I think it's good to be self-critical—I don't think anyone should ever rest on their laurels when it comes to kindness and their capacity for it. We should all be trying way harder.”

    “Tree Six Foive”
    “This song has been around for two years, and it used to be called '365,' but there's a little artist called Charli xcx who released a song with the same name, which is enormous. So, I was like, 'I can't call it that, so I'll just call it what it is in my phonetic spelling.' It's about looking back on my history again and thinking about a time where I made the decision to try and not to be treated badly anymore. I wanted it to be a proper flashback of a song. Even though I don't have these feelings anymore, it's a former version of myself that's doing bad foreshadowing. A stupid song written by a stupid person to illustrate the person that I used to be, I guess.”

    “Take a Sexy Picture of Me”
    “If I'm making an album that is so much about capitalism, the cruelty of the modern condition, and how lack of community has made everyone be an asshole, I had to do one song where I was like, 'I have also been a victim of this.' The thing that had been rattling around in my head the most was last year, when we were doing festivals, and there were all the comments being nasty to me over my physical appearance and my weight. I remember saying, 'Let's make this the most accessible-sounding, biggest, fattest pop song so that loads of people are forced to listen to the most uncomfortable lyrics I've ever written.' Under no circumstances did I think it was going to go anywhere near as big as it did, with Julia Fox doing a little TikTok dance to it, but I knew it would pop off in some way.”

    “Ready”
    “A lot of people in my life really loved this song, but I didn't know how I felt about putting it on a record because it felt too optimistic and poppy. And I still don't really know how I feel about the song, but I really like the place that it occupies in the record. It's about somebody who is giving up after a period of complete stagnation. I wrote it in a COVID-y time. I'm saying I'm so bored of having depression that I'm going to do something self-destructive but fun because I don't care anymore.”

    “Iceberg”
    “This is a song about my best friend Bella. It's funny, we've been best friends since we were 14, and I'm a pop star and she's a lawyer. She's the most studious, hardworking person in the world. When she got her job which she'd worked towards her whole entire life, I saw the pressures of this ambition and this full-time work completely beat her down for a while. And she started to go in on herself. I found it really funny that she thought that I wouldn't know she was suffering. This is the thing in female friendships that I think is so beautiful—you cannot pull the wool over my eyes. I know who you are. There's a joking line in the beginning of it where I'm like, 'Where did you go, crazy girl boss?'”

    “Coronation St.”
    “I wrote bits of this when I was 23. Leaving something to sit and marinate in one form for seven years is something I like doing, so it's like I'm in collaboration with a former version of myself. It's about jealousy, being stagnant, and feeling like I didn't get everything I thought I was owed by life. I wanted to capture that deadness and feeling of having nothing happening in your life and really double down with hindsight just how harrowing it was. I used to do a weird job managing and cleaning apartments in Manchester, and one of them overlooked the set of Coronation Street. I found it mad that it was fake buildings. I was like, 'Wow, even Coronation Street's not real.'”

    “Lord, Let That Tesla Crash”
    “Weirdly, this is the least profound song on the record. It's about loss. My friend died, and I had to write the story of us in it because it was the first time I lost someone I was really close with. You make friends with people without thinking much about it, just enjoying their company. And then, when they're gone, you realize what the point of them was. I only realized how much he meant to me when he died, and so much about his death annoyed me. I felt quite stupid being a touring musician/pop-star person because I was like, 'What's the point in this?' And then, I went to see the flat we both lived in together, and there was a charger and a Tesla parked outside it, and I remember being so angry about that.”

    “Running/Planning”
    “I wasn't going to bring this song to the studio, but we made a draft of it in one night, which sounds almost exactly the same as it does now. It was so instinctive and so immediate. This is another song about ambition, drive, and the downsides of it. I was thinking about how there's a treadmill of life that you get on when you're in a heterosexual relationship. You date for a couple of years and then you get engaged, get married, and then you have a baby and live the rest of life. There's a transactional element to romantic relationships that muddies something that's otherwise quite beautiful. And also, societal pressures to conform. With conformity comes the weird prejudices against people who don't [conform]. Carving your own path and going against it makes your life so hard.”

    “Janis Joplining”
    “'Janis Joplining' is a name I've given to being self-destructive. What's weird is that's not what the song's about. I just thought it was a good line. Maybe it's a bit salacious, but I had a crush on a guy who was married, and I realized a lot of it was born of seeing him and his wife interact with each other. Actually, what I was longing for was the community they had formed and their intimacy. It ends the record because after everything I've just spoken about, what I want is this egalitarian relationship and to comfortably talk intimately with everyone in the world, and if I can't have it, then I self-destruct and go Janis Joplining. I wanted to end on a note that sounds like I think I have a solution to all the problems I've just spoken about for 45 minutes.”
  • source : Apple Music
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