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Lucy Dacus - Forever Is A Feeling
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Lucy Dacus - Forever Is A Feeling

Lucy Dacus - Forever Is A Feeling

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From $25.35
Lucy Dacus - Forever Is A Feeling
$25.35

The Story

In-store pickup pre-orders will receive our Listening Event tote bag/poster (while supplies last).

 Indie Exclusive, Limited Edition, Gold Vinyl, Autographed / Star Signed

While Dacus’s last album, Home Video, explored the world of childhood and adolescence. Forever Is A Feeling is decidedly adult. The lushness of the album’s sound is matched by a new frankness in Dacus’s approach to sexuality and romance. “So bite me on the shoulder, pull my hair,” Dacus sings on “Ankles.” “Pull me by the ankles to the edge of the bed, and take me like you do in your dreams.” The sex in “Ankles” remains fantasy—as in many of the songs, love doesn’t come easy, desire has to be resisted—but the willingness to talk about it shows a new forthrightness, a new and brave willingness to express desire. The song was originally written as a ballad, Dacus says, but on the album melancholy has been transfigured. Pulsing strings build to a thick texture of drums, guitars, a dancingly exuberant bass line, and electronics. Frustration becomes flirtatious, playful, full of the excitement of shared attraction.

Lucy Dacus - Forever Is A Feeling - Image 2

Details & Craftsmanship

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Description

In-store pickup pre-orders will receive our Listening Event tote bag/poster (while supplies last).

 Indie Exclusive, Limited Edition, Gold Vinyl, Autographed / Star Signed

While Dacus’s last album, Home Video, explored the world of childhood and adolescence. Forever Is A Feeling is decidedly adult. The lushness of the album’s sound is matched by a new frankness in Dacus’s approach to sexuality and romance. “So bite me on the shoulder, pull my hair,” Dacus sings on “Ankles.” “Pull me by the ankles to the edge of the bed, and take me like you do in your dreams.” The sex in “Ankles” remains fantasy—as in many of the songs, love doesn’t come easy, desire has to be resisted—but the willingness to talk about it shows a new forthrightness, a new and brave willingness to express desire. The song was originally written as a ballad, Dacus says, but on the album melancholy has been transfigured. Pulsing strings build to a thick texture of drums, guitars, a dancingly exuberant bass line, and electronics. Frustration becomes flirtatious, playful, full of the excitement of shared attraction.