
PEEKABOO GOODWIN
Album info
Album-Release:
2025
HRA-Release:
19.09.2025
Album including Album cover
Coming soon!
Thank you for your interest in this album. This album is currently not available for sale but you can already pre-listen.
Tip: Make use of our Short List function.
- 1 Lifeline 02:53
- 2 X 03:44
- 3 Whiskey 03:03
- 4 How's The Pain, Son 03:24
- 5 Miracle Cure 02:40
- 6 4am 03:30
- 7 Don't Change Nothing 03:30
- 8 Runway 04:14
- 9 Love Song 02:50
- 10 Lucy 02:40
Info for PEEKABOO
GOODWIN is the solo project of Rob Goodwin, frontman and baritone voice of Manchester’s cinematic indie-pop group The Slow Show. During a break from touring in late 2023, he began writing and recording a set of songs that didn’t quite fit the widescreen drama of his band — quieter, rawer, more personal.
Written in the stillness of his German home and shaped in the creative hum of Neukölln, Berlin, these songs are intimate portraits of love, loss, and the quiet courage of connection. Inspired by the emotional directness of Leonard Cohen and Nick Drake, Lifeline is steeped in soft atmospheres and quiet revelations.
‘These songs are fragments of myself,’ says Goodwin. ‘Born in quiet moments at home and shaped in Berlin, with Lambert — a friend and collaborator whose curiosity pushed me to explore new depths. It’s some of my most personal work and sharing it feels exhilarating and terrifying as vulnerability often does.’
Lifeline is a debut that embraces fragility and resilience — romantic, dreamlike, and rooted in the hope that others will hear something of themselves in its silence.
GOODWIN
GOODWIN
As the frontman and baritone voice of the British indie band The Slow Show, Rob Goodwin was responsible for some genuine insider tips of Manchester chamber pop throughout the 2010s. Concerts in seemingly every medium-sized city in the UK ensured that the singer-songwriter was able to gain a wealth of live experience, which he will incorporate into his first solo works starting in 2023. Inspired by American folk legends like Nick Drake and Leonard Cohen, the material becomes an introspection on existential themes, his own biography, and life as an artist. Written in Neukölln, where he also recorded and produced it with pianist Lambert, songs like the minimalistically orchestrated "Lifeline" touch on a musical but also deeply personal level. With this first sign of his upcoming solo album, Goodwin and Lambert demonstrate how intense and inspiring their collaboration is.
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