![]() ![]() Their therapist, who had a background in human resources and family businesses, made them write a contract with each other about their values and come up with job descriptions for the vacancies in their inner circle, which is uncommon in the music industry. The identical twins, now 42, applied the same questions many were asking of themselves at the start of COVID-19 - What does my life look like? What do I want more of? Am I happy? - to each other. To figure it out, they went to therapy together last year. “Is this another sign that there’s something really fractured about our band?” “We were at a crossroads: Either we’re going to find management, or why can’t we find management?” says Sara, sitting next to Tegan on a couch in their publicity firm’s office in early September. Did they even want to be in a band anymore? ![]() ![]() The changes offered freedom, yes, but also uncertainty as they struggled to get on the same page about how to move forward. Then last year, they successfully asked to be let out of their contract with longtime label Warner Records, no longer sure of their place in the major-label system or the mainstream pop world they’d spent the past decade working in. In 2020, the alt-pop sister duo started the amicable yet difficult process of splitting from their management team of 18 years as they further expanded into books and television. The pandemic turned everyone’s world upside down, but for Tegan and Sara Quin, it signaled the beginning of some life- and career-altering events. ![]()
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