Swan Dive Pity Party is DOGDAD’s debut album, released yesterday. Dark and heartbreaking, it’s time to dive into this record. Review.
SWAN DIVE PITY PARTY – DOGDAD
The drums are intense on Know Me Better. With a bubbly guitar and that scream ‘I don’t care’, DOGDAD harmonizes his inner conflicts without muffling them. Hospice takes the shades of nostalgia, like a look in the rear mirror and a bitterness at the back of the throat. However, it feels like a break. The Orchard gets more violent, though. Its hectic rhythm gets my head spinning. The vocals are desperate and heartbreaking.
It’s because this previous track is so strong that Ouroboros is a true surprise. It’s the most pop-rock track of the record, still keeping some bright sharp shards in the vocals, though. Its shape is highly noticeable. It’s Swan Dive Pity Party that closes the record in a vertigo of explosive chaos. There is something distressed in these tracks. And that’s why it’s so gripping to me. It’s a cathartic album that DOGDAD signs here with Swan Dive Pity Party, and a great debut.

