
Makes Me Sick Makes Me Smile
âMakes Me Sick, Makes Me Smile,â the new album by Pretty Sick, sees London-by-way-of-New York Sabrina Fuentes juxtapose a life between two cities where destiny is shaped by the force of our own hands. A fully-realized, visceral experience thatâs both blunt, bleak and stubbornly romantic, it weaves together the heady visions of prior EPs âCome Downâ and âDeep Divineâ into an uncompromising portrait thatâs point-blank and personal. Â
Fuentes penned lyrics between New York and London, and the album maps out the fault lines within each city. âIâd rather die than let you go / and youâll die before you let me,â she sings in the opening chorus of the anthemic âYeah You,â one of the many times âMakes Me Sick, Makes Me Smileâ contemplates the complex ties of finding a home within a scene, which Fuentes explains âis a breakup letterâ to the city. Fuentes grew up in Manhattan, and assumed sheâd carry on working after various fashion internships at VFILES and Helmut Lang, until she had a life-changing conversation at a dinner party where an acquaintance pulled her aside and was adamant she get out. Â
Now recently graduated from Goldsmiths in London, where she met and was living in a house with guitarist Orazio Argentero (who also plays in South London experimental outfit Paddywak), âMakes Me Sick, Makes Me Smileâ feels washed in the low-lit, reflective glare of both cities, a documentation of the all-consuming nature of living in a place that demands all of you. Pretty Sick itself, which has been helmed by Fuentes since her early teens, showcases that determination: the continued evolution of the band is itself a roadmap of relationships steeped in collective experience, anchored by Fuentes singular vision. Original drummer Ava Kaufman returns for the new record, which was produced by Paul Kolderie (Pixies, Radiohead, Hole), and each new collaboration feels like a tangible hallmark of continual resurrection. Â
Across the 12 tracks, Fuentes grapples with her claustrophobic surroundings, and the idea that the environment you exist in can be a matter of life or death. Chock full of flashbacks to anxiety and the warped sense of realism that comes from teetering on the precipice, Fuentes recalls toxic relationships, power imbalances and a myriad of dangerous situations that âstill keep me up at night.â Itâs impossible to completely sever ties: slow-burn âLilithâ was penned about a friend who passed away, and when she sings âif we go out weâll go side by sideâ itâs another haunting rumination of the blood bonds that can tether groups of people to their own self destruction. Â
âIâm someone who sees everything as very black and white,â Fuentes explains, and these concerns with duality run deep throughout the album. An attempt to find balance while oscillating between good and bad, Fuentes grounds the record in double meanings. The record opens with âyellow roses in Tompkins Square,â a deceptively serene image that also signifies flowers given from the unfaithful. Reality and fantasy run parallel with numbness and intensity, while all the while Fuentes yearns to âdo something that matters.â What does it mean to make a difference? Her version of divine intervention manifests itself through her creative work: âI would not have any of the things I have right now if not for my unconditional love of music.â Â
Track title âSaturnâs Returnâ references the astrological concept of growth through enduring trials and tribulations, and despite the uneasy undertones that are pervasive through the record, more than anything, Fuentes emphasizes the fact that you can come back. The album stands on its own as a compact piece of time, as well as a space where the blurred lines of early years running around New York finally solidify into something greater, where they can actually be seen at face value. âIâm in a supernova,â she elucidates on the cathartic âDrunk,â before asking âis this what you expected?â In the end, itâs Fuentes trust in herself and her often split second decisions that persists, more than any heavenly purpose. âMake Me Sick, Makes Me Smileâ asks a lot of questions: of New York, of ourselves, of where weâre going and where we belong. âMaybe we can ride off in the sunset,â she remarks acerbically on the unsentimental grunge of âHeaven,â but what she really means is: maybe our fate is something we can aspire to after all.Â
Tracklist
1. Yeah You
2. Drunk
3. Human Condition
4. Sober
5. Heaven Â
6. Black Tar Â
7. Bound
8. Lilth Song
9. Dirty
10. Self Fulfilling Prophecy
11. Saturn Return
12. PCP
Soundwave
https://youtu.be/8IM684GBNnE
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Description
âMakes Me Sick, Makes Me Smile,â the new album by Pretty Sick, sees London-by-way-of-New York Sabrina Fuentes juxtapose a life between two cities where destiny is shaped by the force of our own hands. A fully-realized, visceral experience thatâs both blunt, bleak and stubbornly romantic, it weaves together the heady visions of prior EPs âCome Downâ and âDeep Divineâ into an uncompromising portrait thatâs point-blank and personal. Â
Fuentes penned lyrics between New York and London, and the album maps out the fault lines within each city. âIâd rather die than let you go / and youâll die before you let me,â she sings in the opening chorus of the anthemic âYeah You,â one of the many times âMakes Me Sick, Makes Me Smileâ contemplates the complex ties of finding a home within a scene, which Fuentes explains âis a breakup letterâ to the city. Fuentes grew up in Manhattan, and assumed sheâd carry on working after various fashion internships at VFILES and Helmut Lang, until she had a life-changing conversation at a dinner party where an acquaintance pulled her aside and was adamant she get out. Â
Now recently graduated from Goldsmiths in London, where she met and was living in a house with guitarist Orazio Argentero (who also plays in South London experimental outfit Paddywak), âMakes Me Sick, Makes Me Smileâ feels washed in the low-lit, reflective glare of both cities, a documentation of the all-consuming nature of living in a place that demands all of you. Pretty Sick itself, which has been helmed by Fuentes since her early teens, showcases that determination: the continued evolution of the band is itself a roadmap of relationships steeped in collective experience, anchored by Fuentes singular vision. Original drummer Ava Kaufman returns for the new record, which was produced by Paul Kolderie (Pixies, Radiohead, Hole), and each new collaboration feels like a tangible hallmark of continual resurrection. Â
Across the 12 tracks, Fuentes grapples with her claustrophobic surroundings, and the idea that the environment you exist in can be a matter of life or death. Chock full of flashbacks to anxiety and the warped sense of realism that comes from teetering on the precipice, Fuentes recalls toxic relationships, power imbalances and a myriad of dangerous situations that âstill keep me up at night.â Itâs impossible to completely sever ties: slow-burn âLilithâ was penned about a friend who passed away, and when she sings âif we go out weâll go side by sideâ itâs another haunting rumination of the blood bonds that can tether groups of people to their own self destruction. Â
âIâm someone who sees everything as very black and white,â Fuentes explains, and these concerns with duality run deep throughout the album. An attempt to find balance while oscillating between good and bad, Fuentes grounds the record in double meanings. The record opens with âyellow roses in Tompkins Square,â a deceptively serene image that also signifies flowers given from the unfaithful. Reality and fantasy run parallel with numbness and intensity, while all the while Fuentes yearns to âdo something that matters.â What does it mean to make a difference? Her version of divine intervention manifests itself through her creative work: âI would not have any of the things I have right now if not for my unconditional love of music.â Â
Track title âSaturnâs Returnâ references the astrological concept of growth through enduring trials and tribulations, and despite the uneasy undertones that are pervasive through the record, more than anything, Fuentes emphasizes the fact that you can come back. The album stands on its own as a compact piece of time, as well as a space where the blurred lines of early years running around New York finally solidify into something greater, where they can actually be seen at face value. âIâm in a supernova,â she elucidates on the cathartic âDrunk,â before asking âis this what you expected?â In the end, itâs Fuentes trust in herself and her often split second decisions that persists, more than any heavenly purpose. âMake Me Sick, Makes Me Smileâ asks a lot of questions: of New York, of ourselves, of where weâre going and where we belong. âMaybe we can ride off in the sunset,â she remarks acerbically on the unsentimental grunge of âHeaven,â but what she really means is: maybe our fate is something we can aspire to after all.Â
Tracklist
1. Yeah You
2. Drunk
3. Human Condition
4. Sober
5. Heaven Â
6. Black Tar Â
7. Bound
8. Lilth Song
9. Dirty
10. Self Fulfilling Prophecy
11. Saturn Return
12. PCP
Soundwave
https://youtu.be/8IM684GBNnE













