Bipp
"Bipp" (stylized as BIPP) is a single by Scottish electronic music producer SOPHIE, released on 17 June 2013 as her debut release on the Numbers record label, backed by the B-side "Elle".[1] The track, produced entirely by SOPHIE, runs approximately 2 minutes and 58 seconds and features a minimalist yet energetic club-oriented sound built around a rubbery bassline, intermittent kick drums, smacking claps, and ebullient, high-pitched vocals repeating the hook "I can make you feel better, if you let me".[2] The song exemplifies SOPHIE's early innovative approach to electronic music, blending elements of trap, house, and futuristic synth-pop in a way that scrambles conventional structures to create an irresistibly fun, next-level club track.[2] Released during a period when SOPHIE was building buzz through anonymous productions and remixes, "Bipp" established the head-spinning newness of her sound, characterized by warped synths, squishy effects, and a neon blur of minimal and maximal aesthetics.[3] It later served as the opening track on SOPHIE's 2015 compilation album Product, which collected her early singles and solidified her influence on the post-bass and hyperpop scenes.[4]Background
Development
SOPHIE, born Sophie Xeon in Northampton, England but identifying strongly with her Scottish roots, began her musical journey in her teenage years, experimenting with electronic sounds in her bedroom after being introduced to the genre through her father's collection of rave tapes.[5][6] After her family relocated to London during her childhood, she later honed her production skills with affordable equipment, drawing from dance music traditions while pushing toward innovative abstractions.[7][5] This period of self-taught exploration culminated in her uploading early preview versions of tracks like "Bipp" to SoundCloud as early as late 2011, which caught the attention of the Glasgow-based Numbers label and led to her signing in early 2013.[8]) The origins of "Bipp" trace back to SOPHIE's home studio sessions in London during 2012 and 2013, where she focused on crafting high-pitched synth lines inspired by the emerging bubblegum bass aesthetic—a glossy, exaggerated take on pop with synthetic bounce.[9][7] Working primarily in her bedroom setup, she developed the track as a foundational experiment, blending euphoric electronic elements with pop's immediate appeal before its official release on Numbers in June 2013.[5] Key to "Bipp"'s sound were SOPHIE's production techniques, including layering distorted vocal samples processed through Logic Pro's varispeed function—slowed by 12% and pitched up for an ethereal, manipulated quality—and incorporating rapid percussion patterns synthesized on the Elektron Monomachine.[9][5] The track's bassline originated on a Yamaha Motif keyboard before being refined in Native Instruments' Razor synthesizer for a sharper, futuristic edge, contributing to an overall "plastic" sound palette that evoked tactile materials like latex and bubbles.[9][5] SOPHIE intended "Bipp" as a breakthrough in merging pop's accessibility—through bouncing rhythms and saccharine melodies—with experimental electronic innovation, aiming to create sounds that felt entirely novel, as she later described: "Every single thing you hear should feel like something you’ve never heard before."[9][5] This approach positioned the track as her pivotal entry into redefining electronic pop boundaries.[10]Release
"Bipp" was released on June 17, 2013, marking SOPHIE's debut single on the Glasgow-based Numbers label.[1] The single was issued in two primary formats: a 12-inch vinyl record and a digital download.[11] The vinyl edition featured "Bipp" on the A-side and "Elle" on the B-side, packaged in a screen-printed paper sleeve with a transparent outer plastic bag.[11] Digital availability included high-quality downloads in formats such as MP3 and FLAC through platforms like Bandcamp.[12] Promotional efforts centered on an official streaming premiere of "Bipp" via YouTube on the release date, providing immediate online access to the track.[1] The vinyl pressing represented a limited run, consistent with Numbers' approach to exclusive physical releases for select titles.[11] This release occurred amid the dynamic UK electronic music scene of 2013, where Numbers actively championed underground artists through innovative singles and events in Glasgow.[13] The label's focus on fusing genres like electro, grime, and experimental pop helped elevate emerging talents, positioning "Bipp" as a key entry in this burgeoning landscape.[13]Composition and production
Musical style
"Bipp" is classified as experimental pop, serving as an early precursor to hyperpop while incorporating elements of bubblegum bass and intelligent dance music (IDM). Its genre-blending approach draws from rave, R&B, UK garage, and EDM, creating a sound that defies traditional electronic music boundaries and challenges listeners' expectations of pop structure. This innovative fusion helped pioneer the exaggerated, futuristic aesthetic later associated with hyperpop, emphasizing playful yet abrasive sonic experimentation over conventional song forms.[14] The track's key musical features include high-pitched, elastic synth leads that dominate the mix with a bright, garish quality, paired with rubbery bass lines that provide a tactile, bouncy foundation. These elements are built around a minimalist structure at approximately 83 BPM, featuring aggressive bass drops and strategic silences that heighten the effervescent tension. The percussion employs nonchalant, compressed hits to evoke a "plastic" texture, contributing to an overall alien and futuristic vibe that feels both minimal and overwhelmingly vivid.[15][16][17] In production, SOPHIE employs envelope-mangling techniques on synths and pitch-shifted vocal samples to create distorted, otherworldly effects, enhancing the track's sugar-rush energy and sense of disorientation. This sound design, rooted in SOPHIE's background in electronic experimentation, results in a hyper-saturated palette that prioritizes bold textures over melodic complexity. While sharing the glossy, ironic sheen of contemporaries in the PC Music collective, "Bipp" stands out for its raw, abrasive edge and space-creating minimalism, distinguishing it as a uniquely confrontational entry in early 2010s club music.[14][18]Lyrics
The lyrics of "Bipp" are notably simple and repetitive, revolving around the core hook "I can make you feel better, if you let me", which is looped multiple times to emphasize sensory and emotional immediacy. This phrase, along with variations like "I can make you feel better" and "If you want to", forms the bulk of the text, creating a hypnotic mantra that prioritizes rhythmic incantation over complex narrative.[19] The structure follows a minimalist pattern, with brief verses—such as "However, you're feeling" and "Whatever you're thinking"—building to a repetitive chorus that reinforces the hook, delivering an abstract, non-narrative flow focused on evoking direct emotional response rather than storytelling. Thematically, the lyrics explore empowerment through confident assertion of emotional influence, intimacy via invitations like "if you let me," and a subtle emotional manipulation suggested by the coercive undertone of promising to alter feelings.[7] This reflects SOPHIE's broader interest in pop music's affective power to condense and express nuanced emotions in concise forms, challenging listeners to question the authenticity of induced feelings, as in the line "I can make you feel better."[20] The content draws on themes of self-discovery and identity, aligning with SOPHIE's vision of pop as a tool for embracing individuality and rejecting conventional emotional rules.[21] Vocally, the delivery features high-pitched, heavily processed vocals that contribute to an "impossibly girlish" quality, blurring lines of gender and identity in a way unique to the track's aesthetic.[22] This treatment enhances the lyrics' sensory focus, creating a disembodied, futuristic intimacy that amplifies the song's emotional immediacy.[20]Critical reception
Initial reviews
Upon its release in June 2013, "Bipp" received widespread praise from music critics for its innovative approach to electronic pop, blending experimental sound design with an infectious club energy. Pitchfork described it as an "excellent new single" that scrambles conventional beats into a "next-level, irresistibly fun club track," highlighting the track's rubbery bassline and exceptionally ebullient vocals that deliver a sticky hook with chirpy insistence.[2] Similarly, The Guardian characterized "Bipp" as a "back-to-the-future affair" full of "soul candy and staccato future-grime rhythm," emphasizing its playful fusion of nostalgic R&B elements with futuristic production.[23] Critics also noted the track's immediate appeal in underground scenes, where it quickly gained traction among DJs and electronic music enthusiasts in the UK. Resident Advisor reported that "Bipp" followed SOPHIE's debut by taking the UK house scene "by storm," revitalizing pitched-up chipmunk vocals—a potentially tired trope—through sheer insistence and energy built by subtraction rather than addition.[24] Outlets like XLR8R covered the release prominently, underscoring its buzz in club circuits as a bold evolution from straightforward house.[25] However, some reviews pointed to elements of abrasiveness that might limit mainstream accessibility, such as the track's unconventional structure. Resident Advisor observed that "Bipp" "barely even has a beat," instead feeling "wet and slippery with a flange effect" that "lands in awkward places," likening it to a "bastardized, slowed-down dubstep" despite its overall boldness.[24] This experimental edge, while praised for its innovation, was seen by some as a barrier to broader pop appeal in early coverage.Retrospective assessments
Following SOPHIE's death in 2021, "Bipp" has been frequently reevaluated in career retrospectives as the track that marked her breakthrough, introducing a futuristic electronic sound characterized by pitched-up vocals and crystalline synths that blurred the lines between club music and pop experimentation. Included on her 2015 debut compilation Product, the song encapsulated the PC Music aesthetic and helped solidify SOPHIE's reputation as an innovator, with critics later describing it as the moment she "unveiled her vision of hyperpop."[26][27] Posthumous tributes after SOPHIE's passing emphasized "Bipp"'s enduring significance, portraying it as a cornerstone of her legacy in reshaping electronic pop, including a 2024 mini-documentary directed by Zoe Chait that showcased her life and collaborations.[28] Obituaries in major publications praised the track for pioneering the hyperpop genre, with The Guardian noting its role in pushing "the boundaries of 21st-century pop" through its bold, otherworldly production. Similarly, NME's tribute highlighted "Bipp" as an early example of SOPHIE's influence on a generation of artists, crediting it with inspiring the "icon of liberation" ethos that defined her work. The 2024 posthumous album SOPHIE and related coverage in outlets like The New York Times have revisited "Bipp" as emblematic of her visionary contributions to music's emotional and sonic markets.[6][29][30] Academic and musicological analyses have positioned "Bipp" as a seminal influence on subsequent genres, including future bass and glitch pop. A 2024 study in Cultural Sociology on hyperpop's formation examines the role of artists like SOPHIE in genre debates on Wikipedia.[31] Theses in musicology examining transhumanist themes in SOPHIE's oeuvre argue for a philosophical shift toward augmented, non-human vocalities in her work, influencing academic discourse on post-internet music authenticity.[32] Commercially, "Bipp" achieved notable streaming milestones in the years following SOPHIE's death, with its inclusion in the 2025 10th-anniversary reissue of Product—which added two unreleased tracks—driving renewed chart performance and listener engagement on platforms like Spotify, where SOPHIE's catalog surpassed 280 million total streams by late 2025. The re-release, featuring "Bipp" alongside other early hits, was celebrated for cementing the track's status as a hyperpop staple, contributing to a surge in plays that underscored its lasting appeal in digital music consumption.[33][34]Remixes and legacy
Autechre remix
In 2021, the electronic duo Autechre released an official remix of SOPHIE's 2013 single "BIPP," fulfilling a long-standing request from the artist herself. The remix originated from SOPHIE's 2015 statement to her label Numbers that Autechre were the only act she would permit to rework her tracks, a collaboration that was delayed until after her passing in January 2021. Autechre acknowledged the tardiness in a statement accompanying the release: "Sorry this is so late. Hope it’s still of some use." Issued digitally on January 14, 2021, and on vinyl on January 28, 2021, the single paired the remix with SOPHIE's previously unreleased B-side "UNISIL," marking a posthumous expansion of the original "BIPP" package and enhancing its archival value within electronic music circles.[35][36] The Autechre remix reinterprets "BIPP" through their signature intelligent dance music (IDM) lens, introducing a stripped-back and loose structure that pays homage to late-1980s influences while diverging markedly from the original's hyperkinetic, plasticine pop energy. Clocking in at 3 minutes and 33 seconds—shorter than the source material—the version features a stuttering off-beat rhythm and arrhythmic percussion that maintain cohesion without veering into excessive abstraction, allowing SOPHIE's pitch-shifted vocals to integrate seamlessly as a haunting, repetitive anchor: "I can make you feel better, if you let me." This results in a darker, moodier atmosphere with laidback drum loops and an overall "deep, dark, and ugly" texture, transforming the track's euphoric bubblegum elements into a more introspective, glitch-tinged deconstruction.[37][38][39] Autechre's involvement lent significant experimental credibility to "BIPP," bridging SOPHIE's boundary-pushing hyperpop with the duo's revered status in IDM, and the remix has since been praised for its respectful yet innovative evolution of the track. It is available through digital platforms such as Bandcamp and Spotify, as well as limited-edition vinyl pressings from Numbers, and has appeared in select retrospective compilations of SOPHIE's work.[35][40][41]Cultural impact
"Bipp" played a pivotal role in launching SOPHIE's career, marking her debut single in 2013 and establishing her as a trailblazer in electronic music through its innovative, synthetic sound that blended pop accessibility with experimental edge.[16] Released as part of the compilation Product, the track's bubbly, metallic production and euphoric hooks quickly garnered attention, earning year-end accolades and solidifying SOPHIE's reputation as a visionary producer.[42] Its release helped popularize hyperpop aesthetics in the 2010s, characterized by exaggerated digital textures and ironic playfulness, influencing the genre's emergence from underground scenes.[43] The song's impact extended to shaping the PC Music collective, where SOPHIE's contributions, including "Bipp," provided a foundational blueprint for the label's glossy, futuristic pop sound that blurred boundaries between irony and sincerity.[44] This influence is evident in collaborations like those with Charli XCX, whose 2016 work with SOPHIE on tracks such as "Vroom Vroom" echoed "Bipp"'s high-energy, distorted vocals and beats, propelling hyperpop into mainstream visibility.[44] Later acts like 100 gecs drew directly from PC Music's ethos, incorporating "Bipp"-inspired chaotic synths and rapid tempo shifts into their glitchy, genre-defying style, as seen in albums like 1000 gecs (2019).[45] In media, "Bipp" has appeared in numerous curated playlists on platforms like Spotify and YouTube, often featured in electronic and hyperpop compilations that highlight its enduring appeal.[46] Posthumously following SOPHIE's death in 2021, the track saw revivals in tributes, including its inclusion in 2021 memorial playlists and the 2025 10th-anniversary reissue of Product, which reemphasized its role in her catalog. In June 2025, to mark the 10th anniversary, Product was reissued with two additional unreleased tracks, 'Get Higher' and 'Ooh', further cementing 'Bipp's place in SOPHIE's catalog.[1][47] These efforts extended into 2024-2025, with "Bipp" sampling in fan remixes and live sets at queer electronic events, amplifying its presence in digital media spaces.[48] "Bipp" has been frequently cited in "best of" lists for electronic music, ranking as the top track in The Guardian's 2021 selection of SOPHIE's greatest works and appearing in Billboard's 2021 roundup of her essential songs for its boundary-pushing innovation.[49][42] Its gender-fluid sound, with fluid vocal manipulations and themes of ecstatic transformation, has sparked discussions in queer music theory, where scholars analyze how the track's immaterial, shape-shifting production challenges binary notions of identity and embodiment.[50] This aspect positions "Bipp" as a seminal example of hyperpop's role in queer expression, influencing theoretical explorations of sonic performativity in electronic genres.[50]Track listing and credits
Singles
The "Bipp" single, released by SOPHIE on the Numbers label on June 17, 2013, in both vinyl and digital formats, features two original tracks without additional content or remixes.[11][51] Track listing- "Bipp" – 3:44[52]
- "Elle" – 3:44