London indie band Sorry return with “Billy Elliot” and “Alone In Cologne”, their first standalone release since the Cosplay era, and the contrast between them says more than the songs admit outright.
Released together, they do not chase reinvention so much as expose a band pulling in two directions at once, testing how much clarity they can allow before the performance starts to fracture again.
“Billy Elliot” moves with more discipline than its title suggests. It opens in a hushed, suspended mood before tightening into a brighter pulse, a slow build that feels deliberate rather than explosive.
References to fading teenage devotion and emotional distance hint at a narrator who no longer trusts music to save them, even as the melody lifts.
The arrangement holds steady while Asha Lorenz’s phrasing edges ahead of the beat, creating tension inside a clearer structure. The song sounds calmer, but the voice refuses to behave. What emerges is not comfort but unease, clarity that never quite settles.
Where “Billy Elliot” gathers itself, “Alone In Cologne” starts pulling threads loose. The groove repeats like a restless travel diary, circling isolation across Berlin, Paris and late-night calls that go unanswered.
It moves with intention at first, almost like a straightforward indie track waiting to happen, yet the production keeps nudging it sideways. Lorenz delivers lines slightly off-centre, hovering above the rhythm instead of locking into it. Guitars smear. Textures collide. Then everything tilts.
By the final stretch the chaos spreads beyond the vocals, as if the structure rebuilds itself mid-song. Another band might smooth this out. Sorry lean into the wobble.
What these songs reveal isn’t a choice between restraint and disorder but a band treating instability like a language. One tightens until the voice pushes back, the other loosens until rhythm is all that remains. It isn’t the chaos that’s changed. It’s who seems to be in control of it. For now.
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