The cult of rock and roll is an easily accessible outlet for cool, open to anyone who wants to fit in, anyone who feels different, a place where you can belong and be accepted. Yet, for all its openness and honesty, there are still taboo subjects that rock refuses to deal with, usually surrounding mental health. The list of musicians who took their own lives or lost theirs to addiction is depressingly long. Cool doesnât cure sadness, it doesnât make you immune to your own mental health and you canât solve all your problems by just ignoring them.
Which is why Leeds duo Kamikaze Girls are such an important voice in the punk scene at the minute, and why âSadâ, their new EP, is such a staggeringly bold accomplishment. At a brisk five songs, itâs not overly wrought in dealing with mental health issues but makes sure it doesnât romanticize the symptoms by buying into the cult of the tortured artist. Kamikaze Girls are all about dealing with mental health issues and negative self-perception straight on, skillfully intertwining raw accounts of depression with their unique blend of pop and 90âs alt rock.
âSadâ acknowledges that owning your own sadness leads to the potential for strength, growth, development – but itâs not an easy ride. When singer and guitarist Lucinda Livingstone sings âIâm pulling out my eyelashes whilst youâre fast asleep in bedâ on opener ‘Hexes’, itâs too specific, too physical – hell, even a little bit embarrassing – to be painted as a picture of tortured cool. Itâs real and raw. These are the songs that youâre too scared to sing, which is why itâs so important theyâre out there in the open.
Matched by a Kinks-esque riff that growls furiously in the verses, and Conor Dawsonâs powerful drumming giving Dave Grohl a run for his money, âHexesâ firmly establishes âSadâs sonic tone – gutsy, effects heavy guitars, with drums that sound like theyâre gonna break at any minute as Livingstoneâs mumbled vocals give way to screams and shouts. In a lot of ways, Kamikaze Girlsâ sound is a real throwback to 90s rock and roll. Lead single âStitchesâ is the offspring of Sleater Kinney and L7, whilst âI Hate Funeralsâ induces same chills as hearing Soundgardenâs âFourth Of Julyâ for the first time all those years ago. Kamikaze Girlsâ strength crucially lies in the fact that thereâs a real warmth at the core of their songwriting, perhaps best demonstrated on the chorus of âI Hate Funeralsâ – hinging on dissonant chords, laden with distortion and howled lyrics.
The record’s intimacy helps carry the narrative thread of things falling apart, culminating in âLadyfuzzâ. A candid account of a suicide attempt, full of open-wound honest lyrics and aggressive howls drawn straight from the soul, âLadyfuzzâ drives towards a euphoric bridge, full of pop-punk sing along appeal. Its biggest success is that it captures the duplicity of this record; the trauma of mental health coupled with the redeeming power of music. Kamikaze Girls are awash in a sea of warm guitars and smashing drums, and although mental health may still be relatively taboo to some, the message is clear. It’s OK to be sad.
MATTHEW WILSON