Perfectly imperfect—that’s “Anyone But Me” by indie artist Kirsten Izer.
Born in New Jersey to visual artist parents, Izer always felt a deep pull toward storytelling.
After years working as a music journalist and publicist in New York City for outlets like Billboard, she eventually relocated to Los Angeles to begin telling her own story as an artist.
Her latest single, “Anyone But Me,” cuts deep with lines like, “so I shifted my shape for show, should have said no.” Izer’s vocal performance is raw, unpolished, and achingly emotional—perfectly fitting the haunting theme of wanting to be anyone but yourself, a feeling most of us have experienced at least once in our lives.
It’s an intentionally imperfect track—one Izer wears proudly.
Rather than chasing a flawless take, she leans into the cracks and vulnerability in her voice, meeting herself exactly where she’s at. You can hear the pain and exhaustion in her delivery, making the song all the more human—and all the more powerful.
Minimally dressed in acoustic guitar, raw vocal melodies, and a cacophony of call-and-response harmonies that trail off at the end, it feels like the sound is wrapping around you—almost suffocating—the way intrusive, self-destructive thoughts do when life becomes overwhelming.
“Anyone But Me” is special, and so is Kirsten Izer. It’s the kind of track that makes you feel a little less alone in a world obsessed with attention and comparison.