Culture Interviews Music

“I needed to find my creative child again”: The Temper Trap’s Dougy Mandagi on the ten-year journey to Sungazer

“I needed to find my creative child again”: The Temper Trap’s Dougy Mandagi on the ten-year journey to Sungazer
“I needed to find my creative child again”: The Temper Trap’s Dougy Mandagi on the ten-year journey to Sungazer

There is an effortless cool to The Temper Trap that makes sitting down to talk to them feel a little intimidating. In a crowded musical landscape, they achieved the indie holy grail: a sound so singularly distinctive that it defies easy categorisation along the alt-rock and electronic spectrum. You are far more likely to hear a new band described as sounding like them than the other way around. Yet, ahead of the release of their new album Sungazer, it’s also hard not to feel a profound sense of empathy for the journey that brought them here. Propelled like a rocket by early global success, the band endured a relentless touring schedule that eventually led to creative burnout. Following a decade-long hiatus from the studio – a period that saw frontman Dougy Mandagi embark on a creative side quest in Berlin, shunning traditional instruments for electronic soundscapes – the group has returned. But it isn’t a simple reunion, rather an instinctive return to their roots.

It’s impossible to discuss the band’s beginnings without confronting the iconic status of Sweet Disposition, a track that has surpassed a billion streams, soundtracking everything from dusty festival fields to club dancefloors via endless remixes. When asked about the alchemy that makes a song strike with such massive cultural force, Mandagi remains disarmingly humble. “There’s a bit of a dark art to it,” he reflects. “There’s a magic to it, and there is no formula. You can try and make a chorus the same, and the tempo the same, and then it just falls flat.” It’s this candid, unpretentious perspective that defines their return: older, wiser, and more mature, they’ve shed that pressure to manufacture magic, resulting in the uncompromised record they always wanted to make. In this interview with Mandagi, we dive into the band’s evolution, their creative process in the studio, and why this latest chapter feels so personal. 

Sarah Bradbury

Sungazer is released on 10th July 2026. For further information or to order the album, The Temper Trap’s website here.

Watch the video for Into the Wild here:

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