Editrix - Tell Me I'm Bad (2021) Hi-Res

Artist: Editrix
Title: Tell Me I'm Bad
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Exploding in Sound Records
Genre: Alternative, Grunge, Indie Rock, Post-Punk
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 33:02
Total Size: 78 / 215 / 382 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Tell Me I'm Bad
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Exploding in Sound Records
Genre: Alternative, Grunge, Indie Rock, Post-Punk
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 33:02
Total Size: 78 / 215 / 382 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Tell Me I'm Bad (2:32)
02. Torture (2:36)
03. Sinner (1:56)
04. Bad Breath (3:02)
05. The Sound (2:47)
06. Instant (3:02)
07. Chelsea (3:09)
08. Anna K (2:16)
09. She Wants to Go and Party (1:57)
10. The History of Dance (3:38)
11. Chillwave (2:59)
12. Taste (3:08)
Wendy Eisenberg, the solo artist who released the album Auto a couple of years ago, is also the leader of Editrix, a Western Massachusetts trio with a skronky, chaotic take on DIY indie-pop. Next month, Editrix will release their debut album Tell Me I’m Bad, and we’ve posted the single “Chelsea,” which rules. Today, Editrix have also shared the album’s title track, and it’s really good, too.
“Tell Me I’m Bad” squirms and wriggles and skitters without ever veering off into experimental noise-rock territory. Instead, the band uses those sounds to spike a straightforward, hooky song about vulnerability. Even amidst the storm of sounds, Eisenberg’s voice has a nice conversational quality to it. In a press release, Eisenberg says that “Tell Me I’m Bad” “expressing interest in someone, even flirting with someone, and wanting so badly to hear what they think about you that you might not even believe it when you hear it.”
“Tell Me I’m Bad” squirms and wriggles and skitters without ever veering off into experimental noise-rock territory. Instead, the band uses those sounds to spike a straightforward, hooky song about vulnerability. Even amidst the storm of sounds, Eisenberg’s voice has a nice conversational quality to it. In a press release, Eisenberg says that “Tell Me I’m Bad” “expressing interest in someone, even flirting with someone, and wanting so badly to hear what they think about you that you might not even believe it when you hear it.”