User:Invisiboy42293/Extensions

= Moshav (band) =

Musical style

 * "This new generation, however, is playing loud rock 'n' roll influenced more by the improvisatory style of the Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers than by Rabbi Carlebach's acoustic performances."
 * "The Moshav Band's latest album,  Return Again,  is filled with well-worn liturgical lyrics and Carlebach compositions, but the arrangements take a page from West Coast folk-rock singers like Jack Johnson and Ben Harper."
 * "Swirsky says his band has many different influences, from Middle Eastern music to 70's rock to Bob Dylan, Bob Marley and Miles Davis. "We mix everything together," Swirsky says. "That's what's special about our music.""
 * Malachim "features the band's familiar, popular rock flavor with Shlomo Carlebach folk influence. All songs are in Hebrew with lyrics mostly based on Psalms or verses from the Jewish prayerbook or the Talmud. A couple tunes contain a few lines in English."
 * "The rock sound is smooth with a good mix of upbeat, jangly, danceable pop-rock songs and soft ballads."
 * "Several of the softer melodies from the new album sound like they would fit in nicely on an American lite-rock radio station, if not for the Hebrew lyrics. The band can also rock out with guitar solos and jamming"
 * "The band has performed with Blue Fringe, Matisyahu and childhood neighbor Neshama Carlebach."
 * "One of the Carlebach songs, "Od Yishama," is given a country-western/bluegrass treatment with fast fiddles and shouts of "yee-haw." The band infuses two tracks with a reggae rhythm."
 * "One unique track on "Malachim" is a cover song of "Abba Shimon" by Israeli-Yemenite singer Zion Golan. The band sticks to the song's Yemenite language and mysterious-sounding Middle Eastern violin and quarter-tone singing, but it rocks it up a little bit with electric guitars."
 * "The rock-group sound of guitar, bass, drums and vocals, often with three- or four-part harmony, is joined on many tracks by mandolin, hand drums and percussion instruments."
 * "Although the band only released its first CD in 1998, it has a dedicated following and is considered in the forefront of a post-Carlebach folk-rock movement."
 * "carries on the Carlebach tradition, influenced by the Bob Dylan, Neil Young and Van Morrison recordings their parents played, and seasoned with the rock music of today."
 * "manages a delicate balancing act between the sacred and the secular."
 * "“The Best of Moshav Band: Higher and Higher” contains songs in English and in Hebrew — more of the former as, in the early recordings, the group sought to garner an international following. There are homesick songs, peace songs and some new takes on ancient liturgical themes. Several, like the title track, “Higher and Higher” are adaptations of Carlebach songs. And, although the high they sing of is a religious one, their rendition is as hip and cool as any rock band around."
 * “Come Back,” a kind of love song to Israel, interpolates a Celtic instrumental riff worthy of a Michael Flatley show — but the song is pure rock with a country-and-western twang. “Wake Up” also is country-and-western but it talks a serious story, not unlike “American Pie” or “Sounds of Silence.”"
 * "As much as they acknowledge their debt to their rabbinical and musical mentor (they have expressed a belief that he is still with them in some mystical way), the musicians of the Moshav Band credit Pearl Jam with much of their inspiration. And for all their rocking, these guys can sing sweet."
 * "“Ufduyey” is a Carlebach piece about the prophecy of Jeremiah that has all the lyricism of an Israeli folk melody, spiced up with an explosive mandolin solo. “Bereshit” has a faintly Latin sound, and “Shabbos Kodesh” harks back to the Breslav Chassidic sect of the Solomon brothers’ childhood and combines klezmer with Middle Eastern effects."
 * "There are a couple of sardonic songs about love — “If Someone Falls in Love With Me” and “Some Love,” recorded live at B.B. King in New York."
 * "Lost Time,” possibly the most powerful track on the disc, talks about leaving the familiar life of the moshav and going out into the wider world, with the insistent refrain, “I’ll be on my way.”"
 * "since we were born through American-speaking parents, English was our main language"
 * "we didnt really grow up watching MTV and playing video games. We spent our time listening to our parents records from the 60s, 70s"
 * "The band got its start writing its own music influenced by people like Dylan, Neil Young, Van Morrison, Cat Stevens and Joni Mitchell. Though the Middle Eastern influence is just as evident, as the group lists Qawwali (Pakistan) legend Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan among its favorites."
 * "The early vocals are steeped in Persian and diminished scales. As the tracks progress, the wailing vocals turn toward a capella, and theres a country feel during When Im Gone."
 * comparison to Matisyahu
 * Misplaced "finds the threesome slimming down its name by losing "band" and moving from a more folksy approach to a fuller electronic/worldbeat, heavily influenced by Peter Gabriel."
 * "Sung predominantly in English with occasional forays into Hebrew, the sound is propulsive, full, and filled with Middle Eastern chord changes."
 * "Driven by a percussive heavy style and a slick but non-commercial sheen, Moshav keeps its spiritually based lyrics ambiguous enough to apply to any religion."
 * "tracks like the moody "Abba Shimon" mesh a traditional Jewish style with sweeping electric guitars and arena-filling sound. The result sounds entirely natural in its ability to blend the time-honored and contemporary without losing sight of pop song structure."
 * "the Eddie Vedder-styled vocals strike a successful balance between radio-ready and the songs' more intimate concepts."
 * "A snappy cover of Tom Waits' "Jockey Full of Bourbon" is a highlight of this engaging album, due to Waits visually arresting lyrics and how Moshav bends its melody to highlight the song's Middle Eastern influences."
 * "The new disc, Misplaced, opens with sounds of collective praying that lead into a poetically revisited "Alenu," followed by the powerful rhythm and string interplay of the similarly God-minded "Closer." On "Gone," Duvid Swirsky's lead vocals flirt with Seventies Bob Dylan and Eighties Peter Gabriel settings."
 * "The title track features a great melody, some poignant lyrics and a radio-friendly yet low-key rock style. The scat chants and snare breaks of "Hallelu" pave the way for the reggae of "Lift Up," which offers up scorching, soaring slide guitar solos and an "I see angels" refrain."
 * "But thematically, Misplaced picks up right where Malachim left off - we're presented with a band on the run that feels lost but remains sure of what it wants to be. "Yes, I'm tired of running / Have mercy, won't you take me home," says Misplaced's title song. Home eludes these boys, whose self-imposed exile has them wandering the world, playing inspired niggun jam-pop, redefining their true selves and, thankfully, sticking to their ambitions."
 * "Every spiritual guitar pop song is pushed to its dramatic edge" on Misplaced
 * "With its sophisticated production — the disc was loaded with snazzy electronic effects — and top-notch studio players, “Misplaced” gave Moshav a significant career boost."
 * Solomon and Swirsky "produce the kind of close vocal harmonies that nowadays are often the result of careful postproduction tweaking, and both offer crisp, rhythmic playing on their respective instruments."
 * "Their tunes are pretty much engineered to be earworms, with neatly rhymed lyrics in Hebrew and English, carefully modulated dynamics and extremely catchy hooks."
 * Cover of Paul Simon
 * "the up-tempo, hoedown like “Come Back,” which featured some head-thrashing solo work from violinist Nimrod Nol"
 * inspired by Carlebach, Diaspora Yeshiva Band, and the '60s and '70s American music their parents played for them
 * "their unique blend of classic rock/ folk/country music with Middle Eastern rhythms"
 * Yehuda Solomon "also noted that the band is conscious of not preaching to anyone with its music. "We never try to push our point of view," he said. "We try to be real and true to ourselves and incorporate those messages that we studied and grew up with in a subtle way that's accessible to anyone. We really try to focus on our lyrics and bring a conscious message to people but, ultimately, we want people to dance and be happy when they hear us play.""
 * "We weren't plugged into technology, so we made music and my dad would take us into the studio to hear his pioneering Jewish rock band and Shlomo, who didn't have a set band when he toured, would take us to his performances throughout Israel and bring my brothers and I on stage to perform with him when we were kids." Speaking of Carlebach, he added, "Seeing Shlomo perform, we learned how to deal with an audience and we also got a great musical and Jewish education."
 * "Carlebach's influence, as well as that of artists such as Bob Dylan, Cat Stevens, Crosby Stills, Nash and Young and Van Morrison can be detected in the Moshav Band's music, but what makes the group unique is its ability to blend these diverse influences with Middle Eastern rhythms, lyrics and sounds."
 * "Playing a mix of alternative rock, Middle Eastern sounds and electronica, the band often features spiritually centered lyrics, but can also show a playful side."
 * "performs original world music, folk and rock in Hebrew and English, as well as “Shlomo tunes.”"
 * "The moshav was an unusually musical place, as Swirsky recalls. "I think about 80 percent of the kids played musical instruments, and a lot of the parents played as well -- not just Shlomo. There was lots of music around, and Shlomo being a performer and musician was a big influence.""
 * "The band's unique sonic blend of alternative rock, modern folk, reggae and Middle Eastern rhythm"
 * ""We try to make music that can talk to everyone," Solomon says of the music he laughingly calls "falafel -- we take a lot of different styles and make them all work together.""
 * ""Anything that's working toward unity -- that's what we're interested in," Solomon says. "Music is an amazing tool for connecting people.""
 * ""We write lyrics about unity, about pride of place and who you are," explains Solomon. Through their music, he says, "we can reach a large audience, a different kind of audience. This is our dream -- all I want to do is music; all I really know how to do is music.""
 * "The 15 tracks include original, traditional, and Carlebach compositions that the two recorded at their home studio in Los Angeles. “We tried to give it a raw vibe, like we’re all just hanging out again and jamming on the Moshav,” said Solomon."
 * "With its mixture of reggae, middle-eastern and traditional styles, and instruments that include bouzouki, banjo, cello, trumpet and oud, the album is an exciting and refreshing way to celebrate Shabbat. “It shows all our colors,” said Solomon."
 * "Standout tracks are a meditative “V’shamru” with its overlay of cellos, the lively reggae-middle eastern styled “Boi Beshalom,” and the catchy, folksy “Shiru.”"
 * "“We try to make music that we really love and connect to. We draw from our Jewish roots and heritage, but hopefully the result is universal, something that also sounds really interesting and cool to someone who isn’t Jewish,” Solomon said."
 * "Founded in 1995, Moshav has brought Jewish music into genres such as alternative rock, reggae, funk and bluegrass."
 * Yehuda Solomon "can seamlessly shift from clean cantorial to meditative Middle Eastern, to greasy grunge" and "can, with equal ease, quote the Baal Shem Tov and Eddie Vedder, the lead singer of Pearl Jam."
 * Solomon "can sound like a chazzan who touches your soul as he sings a portion he normally chants for the High Holidays, “Simcha L’Artsecha,” with harmony by Shlomo Katz."
 * "Then there is the Sephardi sensation in his version of “Abba Shimon,” which he starts by playing the hand drum."
 * "There’s an uncanny similarity to Vedder in the chorus of “Dancing in a Dangerous World,” which also has an Israeli-style intro and refrain."
 * "“I was around Moroccan and Yemenite Jews, so I had the Sephardic influence; I was around Ashkenazis and heard chazzanus [cantorial music] and I listened to American rockers. So I think that all comes out in my music,” he said. Solomon said he attended many Pearl Jam concerts, and Vedder was a hero to him."
 * "Solomon always works himself into a sweat as Moshav’s live shows are high energy and seem less like a concert and more like you walked into the middle of a party. He at times breaks out into animalistic chants while playing the hand drum"
 * "Another special aspect of Moshav comes when co-founder Duvid Swirsky sings solos in a number of the group’s songs. His voice is sweet and still powerful but more folk than Solomon’s rock edge."
 * "“I’m an easygoing guy and the point is to reach people and inspire people,” Solomon said. “If Duvid has a song and wants to express himself, that’s great and I do harmonies. We grew up together, we’re great friends and we have a special bond as great friends as well as musicians. Sometimes, people just click.”"
 * "The 15 tracks include original, traditional, and Carlebach compositions that the two recorded at their home studio in Los Angeles. “We tried to give it a raw vibe, like we’re all just hanging out again and jamming on the Moshav,” said Solomon."
 * "With its mixture of reggae, middle-eastern and traditional styles, and instruments that include bouzouki, banjo, cello, trumpet and oud, the album is an exciting and refreshing way to celebrate Shabbat. “It shows all our colors,” said Solomon."
 * "Standout tracks are a meditative “V’shamru” with its overlay of cellos, the lively reggae-middle eastern styled “Boi Beshalom,” and the catchy, folksy “Shiru.”"
 * "“We try to make music that we really love and connect to. We draw from our Jewish roots and heritage, but hopefully the result is universal, something that also sounds really interesting and cool to someone who isn’t Jewish,” Solomon said."
 * "Founded in 1995, Moshav has brought Jewish music into genres such as alternative rock, reggae, funk and bluegrass."
 * Yehuda Solomon "can seamlessly shift from clean cantorial to meditative Middle Eastern, to greasy grunge" and "can, with equal ease, quote the Baal Shem Tov and Eddie Vedder, the lead singer of Pearl Jam."
 * Solomon "can sound like a chazzan who touches your soul as he sings a portion he normally chants for the High Holidays, “Simcha L’Artsecha,” with harmony by Shlomo Katz."
 * "Then there is the Sephardi sensation in his version of “Abba Shimon,” which he starts by playing the hand drum."
 * "There’s an uncanny similarity to Vedder in the chorus of “Dancing in a Dangerous World,” which also has an Israeli-style intro and refrain."
 * "“I was around Moroccan and Yemenite Jews, so I had the Sephardic influence; I was around Ashkenazis and heard chazzanus [cantorial music] and I listened to American rockers. So I think that all comes out in my music,” he said. Solomon said he attended many Pearl Jam concerts, and Vedder was a hero to him."
 * "Solomon always works himself into a sweat as Moshav’s live shows are high energy and seem less like a concert and more like you walked into the middle of a party. He at times breaks out into animalistic chants while playing the hand drum"
 * "Another special aspect of Moshav comes when co-founder Duvid Swirsky sings solos in a number of the group’s songs. His voice is sweet and still powerful but more folk than Solomon’s rock edge."
 * "“I’m an easygoing guy and the point is to reach people and inspire people,” Solomon said. “If Duvid has a song and wants to express himself, that’s great and I do harmonies. We grew up together, we’re great friends and we have a special bond as great friends as well as musicians. Sometimes, people just click.”"
 * "Another special aspect of Moshav comes when co-founder Duvid Swirsky sings solos in a number of the group’s songs. His voice is sweet and still powerful but more folk than Solomon’s rock edge."
 * "“I’m an easygoing guy and the point is to reach people and inspire people,” Solomon said. “If Duvid has a song and wants to express himself, that’s great and I do harmonies. We grew up together, we’re great friends and we have a special bond as great friends as well as musicians. Sometimes, people just click.”"

Has been cited as an influence by Blue Fringe, Rogers Park, Jewish bluegrass band Jacob's Ladder, and Orthodox pop group The Weinreb Brothers.

(BAUM/Ungodly)
User:Invisiboy42293/Ungodly

Teitelbaum had posted songs to SoundCloud as early as 2014. After leaving USC Thornton, Teitelbaum began her music career under the name BAUM. She released three singles in 2017: "First", "Hot Water",  and "Effortless", the latter of which was premiered by Wonderland. The release of "Hot Water" was marked with an August 2017 concert at Rockwood Music Hall in New York. In February 2018, she released the single "This Body", a body positivity-themed song which was premiered by Billboard and Nylon and was used by Target for their "No Body Like Mine" campaign. Initially teasing a debut album entitled First for a spring 2018 release, she instead released the EP Ungodly on March 16, 2018, with production by Oak Felder proteges The Orphanage (Trevor Brown and Zaire Koalo), who had previously co-produced Demi Lovato's "Sorry Not Sorry"). That same month, she performed at South by Southwest, her first festival appearance, and was featured on the festival's official 2018 playlist. She was scheduled to perform in April at Boston's Middle East nightclub with singer Dagny but cancelled due to a case of bronchitis. She was also highlighted on Spotify's curated playlists "Out Now" and "Young & Free".

Teitelbaum was inactive for much of the year that followed, in part due to personal turmoil including her mother's death, a breakup with her boyfriend, and a split with her manager. She returned in May 2019 with the single "Fuckboy", followed in August by "Bad Kid", whose music video was filmed in Iceland. "Fuckboy" was intended as the lead single of a second, longer EP to be released that year, and a music video was filmed for a planned third single, "Girls Who Like You", although neither ultimately materialized. Another single, a cover of Mac Miller's "Dunno", was released on December 3, 2019.

(musical style)

 * self-described as "natural grunge"
 * "Hot Water" is "poppy and soulful"
 * comparison to Muna and Haim
 * alternative pop
 * electropop
 * influences: Adele, Spoon, The 1975's A Brief Inquiry into Online Relationships, Tierra Whack, The Japanese House, The Twigs, and Sharon Van Etten
 * admiration for Nilüfer Yanya, Jamila Woods, Dominic Fike, Sasami, Yuno, and Gus Dapperton
 * influences: Adele, Spoon, The 1975's A Brief Inquiry into Online Relationships, Tierra Whack, The Japanese House, The Twigs, and Sharon Van Etten
 * admiration for Nilüfer Yanya, Jamila Woods, Dominic Fike, Sasami, Yuno, and Gus Dapperton


 * "on the soul-pop spectrum"
 * chill pop
 * "dark pop"
 * "slicker electronic pop style"; single "Fuckboy" was similar to Halsey
 * BAUM was synthy pop
 * "Fuckboy" music video visually evokes HAIM, Maggie Rogers, and Euphoria
 * fan of The 1975, Caroline Polachek, Joji, Daniel Caesar, and Julia Michaels
 * fan of The 1975, Caroline Polachek, Joji, Daniel Caesar, and Julia Michaels


 * influenced by Madonna and Janis Joplin
 * comparison to Lady Gaga and Lorde
 * comparison to Lady Gaga and Lorde

Lyrics

 * "This Body" is about experiences with catcalling
 * themes of sexuality, body image, first love, heartbreak, coming of age, womanhood, and sexism
 * "Hot Water" is about Teitelbaum's coming out as queer
 * "Hot Water" is about Teitelbaum's coming out as queer


 * themes of feminism, body positivity, and female empowerment
 * Ungodly dealt with body positivity and self-love, while "Bad Kid" deals with remorse, regret, and suffering
 * social issues, queer relationships, sexual discovery
 * Ungodly themes: heartbreak, queerness, and mental illness

Artistry

 * her “sad girl” mix of ’90s grunge and Brit pop paired with the brooding sensibilities of singer-songwriters like Elliott Smith and Patti Smith
 * grungey indie, "gloom rock"
 * reverb-drenched guitars
 * "On songs like “Kiss City” and “Sober Together,” Teitelbaum strips away some of the grittiness — creating ethereal, dream-like melodies that perfectly balance the harder side of the album."
 * "On songs like “Kiss City” and “Sober Together,” Teitelbaum strips away some of the grittiness — creating ethereal, dream-like melodies that perfectly balance the harder side of the album."

Compared to:


 * "Striking a balance between Courtney Barnett’s lackadaisical cool and Hole at its most searing"
 * Offering to bridge the gap between the Phoebe Bridgers crowd and big grunge hitters like old school Hole, Black Honey and the Paramore revival, ‘Sepsis’ is raw while still being anthemic.

Lyrics

 * heartbreak, queerness, addiction and sobriety
 * Album themes: heartbreak, grief, addiction and social anxiety
 * Songwriting is "vulnerable, funny, painfully honest and doesn’t hide behind vague language. Her work is a true foil to that of folks who love metaphors"
 * "Blondshell is a record about relationships and friendships in the wake of newfound sobriety."
 * The metamorphosis of Blondshell arrives in fits of heartbreak, loneliness and proclamations of wants and desires, as she gleans the most brazen details from her surroundings into a three-minute vacuum.
 * Blondshell offers a perfect balance between sex, relationships, violence and trauma
 * “I think, culturally, my Judaism finds its way into my music, even in ways that I haven’t really been aware of until somebody brought it up”
 * thematic similarities to Girls and Broad City
 * "The constant undertone is one of personal trauma — from unhealthy relationships, bad sex and other dark things in her personal life that she didn’t want to elaborate on. “There are just ways of talking about trauma that I think are kind of distinctly Jewish,” she said, “and that comes up in my music for sure.”"
 * "self-lacerating humor" often in her songwriting
 * "the album also stands out for its caustic, wry lyrics, which often embrace sexuality and female desire with brazen openness" (NME)
 * Blondshell has themes of self-exploration, addiction, grief and relationships
 * Lyrical themes of anger and self-examination
 * Themes of social anxiety and toxic sex
 * "Olympus" is about “the chaos of being 21 or 22”
 * Blondshell themes: betrayal, addiction, self-destruction
 * sense of humor influenced by Jewish singer-songwriters like Carole King
 * songs explore '00s media impact of HBO and Veronica Mars
 * Blondshell dissects "the tempestuous experience of young womanhood" and "is equal parts brutal and magical."
 * songs based on personal experiences of heartbreak and loss
 * "singing openly about getting saved and accepting her queer identity."
 * "caustic wit, brutal honesty"
 * album is "rooted in self-discovery", themes of love, loneliness, and identity
 * "Dangerous" is about social anxiety impacting relationships
 * track-by-track
 * "Salad" mentions Jewishness; Teitlebaum acknowledges Jewish sensibility of finding humor in difficult subject matter
 * "explosively intimate lyrics that offer a glimpse into the life of a 20-something trying to navigate sobriety, relationships and sex."
 * "she maintains the same themes throughout her discography, questioning the differences among love, lust and addiction"
 * lyrics "embody a stream of consciousness that meanders through vulnerability and honesty without a hint of resistance"
 * "Olympus" has "heavy, visceral lyricism, where Teitelbaum confesses her helplessness in a destructive relationship. “I wanna save myself, you’re part of my addiction. I just keep you in thе kitchen while I burn,” she sings. Moments like this seethe with shades of Elliott Smith’s dark honesty and you root for her to come out on the other side."
 * "the foundations of the project’s songwriting: diaristic confession, caustic lyricism, and 90s alt-rock hooks in the vein of bands like Hole."
 * "If there is a single throughline that connects Baum and Blondshell, it is Teitelbaum’s talent for searing and brutally honest lyrics."
 * "relentlessly confessional, full of moments of unflinching self-examination and withering fury"
 * Fiona Apple (lyrical comparison)
 * "the foundations of the project’s songwriting: diaristic confession, caustic lyricism, and 90s alt-rock hooks in the vein of bands like Hole."
 * "If there is a single throughline that connects Baum and Blondshell, it is Teitelbaum’s talent for searing and brutally honest lyrics."
 * "relentlessly confessional, full of moments of unflinching self-examination and withering fury"
 * Fiona Apple (lyrical comparison)

BAUM

 * "Fuckboy" interview
 * "This Body" was used in a Target commercial about body positivity
 * wrote "This Body" at age 19
 * was featured on Spotify's "Out Now" and "Young & Free" playlists and in Target's "No Body Like Mine" campaign
 * mother died in early 2018
 * "Bad Kid" release; music video filmed in Iceland
 * following Ungodly, tumultuous personal period (mother died in January 2018, broke up with boyfriend, split with manager)
 * "Bad Kid" video filmed in Iceland, five hours outside Reykjavík
 * was working on a new EP in mid-2019
 * "Bad Kid" video, Iceland, etc.
 * following Ungodly, tumultuous personal period (mother died in January 2018, broke up with boyfriend, split with manager)
 * "Bad Kid" video filmed in Iceland, five hours outside Reykjavík
 * was working on a new EP in mid-2019
 * "Bad Kid" video, Iceland, etc.
 * "Bad Kid" video, Iceland, etc.
 * "Bad Kid" video, Iceland, etc.

Blondshell

 * 25 years old
 * Most of Blondshell was written at the genesis of COVID in 2020, as a result of, as Blondshell puts it, “not a lot going on and having a lot of big feelings that I need to talk about.”
 * trying to get better at guitar led to Blondshell
 * "Sepsis" inspired by "Doll Parts"
 * "I really didn't want any sort of electronic production,” Blondshell reveals. “I wrote all of these songs on guitar, so I wanted to amplify everything just as it is.”
 * performed at high school talent shows, including one with guitarist Jasper Jarecki, son of documentary filmmaker Andrew Jarecki
 * “It just feels like me. It doesn’t feel like an alter-ego. I wanted to have the music come out under another name, mostly because my first and last name [are] long and hard to spell. But it feels like me. Even during the show, I’m not trying to be anyone else. I’m just trying to be as honest as possible and myself as much as possible,” she says. “I think it would be really hard not to do that. I don’t think I ever tried to be anyone else. I just didn’t have as much clarity by nature of being younger. Now I get to be myself and know who that is more than I have in the past. It is relieving.”

(Genre and sound)

 * “We saw a gap and we tried to fill it ourselves,” says Mee. “They’re catchy songs, there are poppy elements, but they also have balls and personality. I’m really confident these songs are where they need to be in order to do something.”
 * “There is no genre for Hot Milk because every single song is different. If we ever do a full-length, then I think people are going to be very shocked by the diversity on that record. Because, at the end of the day, if a song’s good, then a song’s good.”


 * Mee calls their music "Indecisive rock ’n’ roll"


 * shift to heavier alt rock
 * "The hooks are punchier, the chorus spreads a darkness in the band that’s yet to be seen and it’s worlds away from the poppier tendencies we heard on Are You Feeling Alive?"
 * band wrote "Bad Influence" to be similar to "Candy Coated Lie$"
 * Han: “We’ve definitely taken big, straight rock approach to a lot of the middle-eights on this record, which I think you can particularly hear in this song and it’s not like anything we’ve done before.”
 * Jim: “When Hannah and I sat down to write this record, we really wanted something that was going to transfer live, so we’ve written the whole EP with live in mind, asking: ‘How is this going to come across?’ This one is just straight-up something you can bounce your fucking head to.”
 * Han: “I think it sounds more mature, honestly, and I think it’s bigger. It’s more anthemic and written with arenas in mind, which is where we want to be.” Jim: “I feel like we’re kind of settling into understanding who we are as a band, and what we sound like. So I feel like this EP is a little bit more polished in the sense that we really understand what we want to write now. It feels a little bit more kind of together, if that makes sense.”
 * Han: “I think it sounds more mature, honestly, and I think it’s bigger. It’s more anthemic and written with arenas in mind, which is where we want to be.” Jim: “I feel like we’re kind of settling into understanding who we are as a band, and what we sound like. So I feel like this EP is a little bit more polished in the sense that we really understand what we want to write now. It feels a little bit more kind of together, if that makes sense.”


 * Mee sees band as rock and roll that "flirts" with pop punk but has "a wider sensibility than that"


 * "hardcore vocal smash" on Teenage Runaways
 * "From creating entire choirs out of a single voice layered over and over and over to dropping in "Baker Street"-style sax solos"

(Lyrical themes)

 * “For us, this whole [first EP] is almost like a diary entry. Each song signifies a step by step process about a realisation of our lives at the time it was written. We touch upon mental health, feeling both distant and present from reality, unkind people in positions of power and self-betterment. “Are You Feeling Alive?” is a modern frustration about being on the wrong path and realising your full potential. It’s a question of really looking at yourself and the path you’re taking and asking, ‘am I really happy?’”
 * Han on Wide Awake: “This song came from a bit of an angry place for me. This whole song revolves around realisation. I was in an environment where everyone was blindly following a hierarchy that I did not agree with. It felt like I was the only one questioning the norm as I felt like it was morally wrong, I didn’t want to be part of the herd mentality. For me, this is our protest song.”
 * Han: “Saying that though, a lot of what we’ve written lately is verging on observations and political. My degree is in politics so I’ve always said I’d love to write a political record.”
 * Han: “Saying that though, a lot of what we’ve written lately is verging on observations and political. My degree is in politics so I’ve always said I’d love to write a political record.”


 * “We want to empower people,” says Hannah. “We always say: if you come to see this band, you come as you are. You’re welcome, regardless of gender, regardless of if you want to kiss boys, kiss girls, kiss anybody, whatever. We just want to create a welcoming atmosphere where people can meet new people and support and celebrate themselves.”
 * "So that's what “I JUST WANNA KNOW” is. We get one shot. Let's give it a go."


 * Jim Shaw: “I think IJWK EP sums up the way our brains work and what we’ve been feeling recently. Forever questioning everything and wanting to know the answers to the unknown. We always say, writing these songs is our therapy. IJWK is fairly obvious from the title, what is the point of us living our lives, does it really mean anything but at the same time we’re here so let’s just have some fun and not take everything so seriously. ‘I Think I Hate Myself’, ‘Split Personality’ and ‘Woozy’ are pretty self-deprecating. We were in a pretty shitty place when we wrote these, not feeling we were reaching our full potential, frustrated at ourselves and just generally overthinking everything to the point of making ourselves anxious and miserable. It’s kind of a reminder that you can be your own worst enemy when you live inside your head for too long. ‘The Good Life’, is basically about the materialistic world we live in and the idea that money is everything is a lie. We’re sold an image that to be successful means you have to have physical assets and how money warps your perception on life.”
 * Mee sees more recent material as darker and more mature than previous work
 * "They aren’t so different from a lot of their contemporaries thematically, this time leaning back on their own empowerment as outcasts and individuals, but with a deftness to it that keeps them from sliding into the homogeneity and boredom those themes can often inspire."
 * "Han’s strong moral compass has kept Hot Milk in the headlines, not just because of the music. It’s her spirit that permeates all they do as a band, and it’s seen all over their social media, too. Whether they’re talking about their own music or weighing in on subjects like Roe Vs Wade, they’re not afraid to use their platform when they feel it’s needed – even if they’ve got their fair share of backlash for it. “I don’t give a crap what religion you are. What I care about is the fucking US trying to flex their muscles aboard. That’s what I care about, because I am anti-American, and a lot of my degree and master’s was in American politics.  “I have strong opinions on stuff, but I think it’s important to know when to shut your mouth as well, especially being in a band that sings about heartbreak. It’s not like I’m in Rise Against, is it? Knowing when to speak is just as important as when not to speak, because sometimes it’s none of my business because I can’t speak on behalf of a group of people.”"