With her latest single, "Everything You Hate," Lauren Presley enters a more pointed, combative lane in her sound than before; an assertive alt-rock release that drops self-analysis for brazen catharsis. Presley makes an emotionally charged track that pushes her sound forward while remaining so personal and yet universal, with a vocal performance that draws you in.
With punchy, high-octane guitars and a hook made for crowd chants, "Everything You Hate" captures the moment you go from holding back to owning yourself. The production is charged with a heightened sense of urgency to match the emotional weight of the message. Presley turns frustration into momentum, and where she leaves behind a past that had confined her to noises, it fuses into something louder, language made stronger, surer by repetition.
"Everything You Hate" embraces its aim, confronting double standards and covert manipulation with a vengeful attitude. A watershed, where meekness becomes aggression, and a therapeutic session is replaced with an act of power. The chorus hits, meant to stick around long after the final beat drops, embodying those ready to stop shrinking women down and start giving them their wings.
Lauren Presley is gaining traction as a new voice in alternative rock and alt-pop, carving out a space defined by authenticity and conviction. "Everything You Hate" is a new beginning, one that can only be described as larger, more brash, and absolutely unavoidable.