Break out the garden gloves and prepare for aggressively botanical wordplay—Maisie Peters, Britain’s pint-sized pop philosopher, is back with Florescence, her third studio album. 15 tracks deep, with Julia Michaels and Marcus Mumford helping to twine their vocals around wilting relationships, girls who finally fly, and the art of finding your own sunspot, it’s some of her sharpest lyrical work yet. (See: ‘Houses,’ where she laid every lyrical brick herself in her own mini-Taylor Swift Speak Now moment.)
When speaking to Deezer, Maisie reminded us that she’s been categorizing her albums into flower pots as one does—her debut, You Signed Up For This, is a tulip; The Good Witch is a rotting red rose, which brings us to Florescence, a daisy. But here’s the thing: there are over 20,000 species of daisies. So naturally, we’ve sorted our top four tracks into daisy varieties, because subtlety has never been our strong suit (and we wouldn’t want it to be). 🌼
‘Mary Janes’
Maisie comes to devour with her metaphors right from track one, ‘Mary Janes,’ which gets its title from the lyric, “The it girls with their little dogs and Mary Janes.” Think ballet flats, Chanel-style shoes—the kind of thing that looks effortless but costs three months’ rent. Peak coquettish femininity, weaponized. As the narrator, she’s got power in the song. Still, she’s clocking the power imbalance in real life, reducing the cool girls to their accessories—Mary Janes, little dogs, whatever’s fashionable this fiscal quarter. And though she’s the epitome of all our inside thoughts (constantly negging ourselves like we’re trying to pick ourselves up at the bar), she lands on the realization that she doesn’t need the industry’s glitz when she’s got something real with her boyfriend.
But there’s also this quiet yearning humming underneath—she still wants to fit in, just a little. She references the European leg of The Eras Tour, where she opened for Taylor Swift, and how something she was so excited for became internet fodder when trolls tore into her vocals. By carrying that bruise into the first verse, she’s able to lean into that snarky, self-aware confidence underdogs have to wear like protective armor—or in her case, walking boots over Mary Janes.
We’re going with the Montauk Daisy, or if you want a mouthy tongue twister, Nipponanthemum nipponicum. We’re not kidding, this daisy is as whimsical as we are with white petals and a gorgeous, bright yellow bud. It blooms late in the season when the it-girl flowers have faded, completely unbothered by trends.
‘Houses’
Did you know our little Shakespearean songwriter wrote around 65 songs for Florescence? One she wrote entirely solo is ‘Houses’—a heart-stabbing, revelatory glimpse into how her exes’ lives will unfold now that she’s thoroughly out of the picture. The first verse gives us the Playboy-turned-domesticated trophy husband: guitar gathering cobwebs, pushing a stroller instead of lifting weights, living the suburban dream he swore he’d never want. The second verse immortalizes the forever bachelor with his little black book of endless phone numbers. A man who can’t even water a plant, let alone sustain a relationship.
But the standout lyric lives in the chorus: “I can see it, like a nightmare, like a vision / The houses my old lovers will live in.” That word vision is doing Herculean work here. Us girlies will scroll our TikTok FYPs, desperate for the next tarot reading, sprawl on our bedroom floors shuffling cards, wake from vivid dreams clutching at prophecies—all of it dripping with the fantasy of ending up happy. Maisie’s twisted it into something dark and haunting: a vision of fairytales that no longer belong to us, futures we’ve been written out of entirely.
The Paper Daisy—or Xerochrysum bracteatum, because clearly gardeners love flaunting that their vocabulary is as extensive as their flowerbeds—blooms in radiant yellows, pinks, creams, and oranges. An Australian native with almost no moisture content, they’re everlasting flowers that dry to perfection, preserving the past exactly as it was. Or, more accurately, exactly as you’ve decided to remember it.
‘Flat Earther’
‘Flat Earther’ devastatingly captures the forensic investigators we all become during a situationship—stalking their online profiles like we’re CSI, zooming in on their ex’s curls in the background of a three-second Instagram story, dissecting every emoji like it holds the smoking gun. The title dangles just out of reach, taunting us: almost official, not quite yours. We become the worst versions of ourselves, but also, paradoxically, the most productive—doing absolutely anything except accepting the glaring truth that it’s over.
The lyrical callbacks are delicious, too. “Down rabbit holes, are you still in there?” in the pre-chorus echoes the ‘Audrey Hepburn’ music video, where Maisie wanders through forests in that infamous blue dress. She’s said falling in love felt like tumbling down a rabbit hole, “suddenly seeing the world in a way you never knew it existed before.” Except this time, no one’s meeting her at the bottom of the burrow. Meanwhile, “I was flying in the face of science” flips ‘Girl’s Just Flying’ on its head: she’s gone from flying on delusion to finding her own wings. Her vocals here are absolutely mesmerizing—that post-chorus cascade of stuttering “I”s is spine-tingling.
We’re going with the rare Blue-Eyed Daisy, or Arctotis stoechadifolia, for the overachievers, which blooms in South Africa and has been spotted in New Zealand, with its stunning purply-blue buds and a sunny yellow outline. This daisy only opens in direct sunlight, snapping shut the moment clouds roll in—perfect for someone who could only see what they wanted to see and built their own reality in whatever light they chose to believe in.
‘Girl’s Just Flying’
Probably the thesis statement of Florescence—and for that reason, we’re giving major side-eye to whoever felt iffy about it and made Maisie fight for it to stay on the record—’Girl’s Just Flying’ is that giant exhale you finally release once you’ve blocked their number, deleted the photos, spiraled about them one last time… and then suddenly, a few days later, you realize you just haven’t thought about them at all. It’s about dancing with your single friends and watching movies with your little brother. It’s about finally being clean again (yes, we hear you, Taylor) and rediscovering your spark.
And here’s the kicker: for Maisie, it’s about all of her daisies—aka you—because fans are featured in the lyric visualizer, standing in line for a gig where she gets to fly with her band. Every album, Maisie timestamps herself with her current age, and this one lands in the lyric, “I’m twenty-three in Tennessee and look, it’s snowing.” As a self-professed Rory and massive Gilmore Girls devotee (her songs fuel countless edits), the snow here isn’t just meteorological—it’s Lorelai’s snow, the magical, joyous, everything-is-finally-right kind. Maisie is happy, or as she puts it, “I’m not bitter, I’m not dying.” She name-drops gigs like opening for Coldplay at the Olympic Stadium in Athens, and even while performing songs about them, she’s already moved on. The song has the receipts.
We’re going with the Wandering Daisy for this one, or Erigeron peregrinus (which genuinely sounds like a Harry Potter spell—very on-brand for our Brit-pop witch). Sporting purple petals and a traveler’s soul, this daisy moves through landscapes without a backward glance, blooms wherever it lands, leaves beauty in its wake, and never stays tethered to one place. Untethered, unbothered, in flight.
Sorting Heartbreak Into Seed Packets
What’s your favorite track from Florescence that we’ve covered? Maybe we’ve done a little mystical gardening of our own, and the exact daisy packet that matches your song is now sitting in your online cart at the local garden warehouse. We’d absolutely love to see your daisies bloom along with you (with Maisie’s soundtrack providing the golden light that makes everything grow, naturally). Snap us your photos and send them through on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook—let’s make this the most emotionally complex garden border the world has ever seen. 🪴☀️
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