Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 15 July, 2021

Broken Baby Announce New Album, Share Ferocious 'Get The Piss Up'

Hot Songs Around The World

All I Want For Christmas Is You
Mariah Carey
1413 entries in 28 charts
Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree
Brenda Lee
526 entries in 24 charts
Jingle Bell Rock
Bobby Helms
423 entries in 20 charts
Last Christmas
Wham!
1263 entries in 26 charts
APT.
Rose & Bruno Mars
289 entries in 29 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
513 entries in 28 charts
Merry Christmas Everyone
Shakin' Stevens
325 entries in 11 charts
No One
Alicia Keys
465 entries in 32 charts
Beautiful
Christina Aguilera
534 entries in 29 charts
A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
700 entries in 22 charts
Stargazing
Myles Smith
434 entries in 20 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
782 entries in 27 charts
Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido
Karol G
269 entries in 13 charts
Feliz Navidad
Jose Feliciano
343 entries in 23 charts
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Los Angeles band Broken Baby are back with a new single, and news of their sophomore album, Late Stage Optimism. "Get the Piss Up" is an instant classic from the group, pitting Alex Dezen's jagged guitar work against Amber Bollinger's attitude soaked vocal performance. It comes on the heels of the bands first show back, a sold out, sweat soaked night at LA's El Cid. The infectious track comes complete with a high adrenaline visual that finds the two performing in their garage, goofing around at home, and transported to a psychedelic night club.
"Did I make you nervous? How nervous?" sings Amber Bollinger, frontwoman for Broken Baby, on the L.A.-based band's second full length LP, Late Stage Optimism. Bollinger is a performer and songwriter whose performance art-grade stage antics sometimes make people nervous. And she's okay with that.

Broken Baby is the musical brainchild of veteran indie rocker/producer Alex Dezen (main songwriter and front man for the now defunct Brooklyn band The Damnwells) and Bollinger, a former college athlete and trained actor. As a working actor in Hollywood for years, Bollinger experienced seemingly unending sexual harassment and misogyny. If you follow the four-year-old band's history, it's clear that it was formed as a vehicle for Bollinger, both as a writer and performer, to channel her rage.
"Sexual harassment was totally normalized," she explains. But when #metoo hit, Bollinger was ready to channel her frustration into music. "I was in another band," she says, "and I just sort of showed up and sang, and I wasn't proud of it. The lyrics didn't reflect my beliefs. I filled a role which I was used to doing as an actor. It was unfulfilling." The reckoning Bollinger was experiencing was being writ large in the world. The music, and the band's performances reflected that. Broken Baby quickly started packing venues. Before the pandemic shut down live shows, Bollinger was crowd surfing and leaping over cocktail tables (she earned a scholarship in track and field). She gets in audiences faces, and not everyone loves it.

Their latest, an 11-song LP embraces that in-your-face ethic. Late Stage Optimism features punchy guitars reminiscent of The Runaways, snaking bass lines, and stacked lead vocals from Bollinger that snarl, owing as much to The Breeders as SoCal punk.

On "Die! Die! Die!" Bollinger takes the mantle from feminist, proto-political groups like Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Sleater Kinney, but adds her own anti-capitalism bent. She sings, "We're all gonna die/but not before we buy what we cannot afford." Then, turning the tables on the patriarchy, adds, "I didn't' realize you were squeamish/ from down there underneath my boot."

On "Manic Panic," a track that's pure, post-apocalyptic Blondie, Bollinger manages to work "mammary glands"-another nod to riot grrrl icons like Kathleen Hanna-into the chorus, and confesses "Sometimes I swing and miss/ sometimes I'm just a big old dollhouse bitch." But Late Stage Optimism isn't just gloriously bitchy. It has plenty of moments of vulnerability, too. On "Cloud Coverage", Bollinger tackles the subject of depression and mental illness "It's a sunny day, just not in my brain, wish I knew what was wrong with me."

Recorded primarily in the couples' El Sereno, CA, home during the pandemic, producer and mixer Dezen, who is a veteran of home recordings (the first Damnwells album for Sony was recorded by Dezen and a friend in a Manhattan storage space), breaks from the sloppy, bedroom aesthetic of other DIY bands and delivers a sound that feels like it came out of a posh studio set ablaze-think Electric Ladyland with all the knobs set to 11.
As a former actor, Bollinger is acutely aware of the way she internalized the shame of being commodified, as many women do. Broken Baby has become a kind of antidote to that shame. "Ultimately, I just want you to see that I'm in front of you. If you like it that's great, if you hate it, that's also great. I want to be seen."






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2025
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.0049789 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0039339065551758 secs