Samia: Honey review – blackly comic indie-rock confessionals | Music

The artwork for Honey

On her second album of raw, deliciously sad indie-rock, Nashville-based Samia constantly flits between blackly comic confessionals and excruciating bloodletting. Opener Kill Her Freak Out, underpinned by a funereal organ sigh, imagines her killing an ex’s new lover, the words delivered with a shrug of internet-speak irony. Moments later, however, she draws the listener back in: “Can I tell you something?” she sings, her voice close: “I’ve never felt so unworthy of loving.”

The artwork for Honey

It’s a trick she plays throughout; constantly zooming in and out of tales of broken relationships, toxic behaviour and addiction in ways that feel diaristic and uncomfortably relatable. The delicate Pink Balloon juxtaposes a friend’s emotional turmoil with the 26-year-old’s increasingly desperate attempts to keep things light (“I’m tryna make you laugh / Sweating like an acrobat”), while Breathing Song describes a night out turned bad (“from the bar to the ER”), before its chorus of increasingly pained “no, no, no”s acts as a much-needed universal purging.

Musically, much like her 2020 debut, The Baby, Honey skews lo-fi, positioning Samia’s versatile voice front and centre over bruised synths (Nanana), or acoustic guitar (the country-folk lilt of To Me It Was). There are flashes of expanse, however. Rostam adds a sparse drum machine and shards of mutilated guitar to the inquisitive Mad at Me, while Sea Lions blossoms from plaintive organ to a sad club throb penetrated by snatches of discombobulating voicemail messages. Playful, painful and loaded with hooks that worm their way to the surface, Honey feels ripe for bleak midwinter wallowing.

Honey is out 27 January on Grand Jury.

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