Single Review: Messy

Psycho Gab

Review by Danica Bryant // 25 May 2023
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Single Review: Messy 1

Auckland five-piece Psycho Gab make their mark on the local music scene with their debut single, Messy. Fusing neo-soul and R&B into an engaging, easily consumable number, it’s an exciting introduction to the band.

Messy is filled with joyous, jazzy drums, dreamy keys and sweeping melodies. The band’s lead singer lets their soul shine through on every line with impressive control and expressivity. “We can’t settle into complacency”, comes the belted lyric before a chorus filled with thrilling new flourishes. It’s a track that is constantly unpredictable without losing its familiarity. Even better, the musical content aligns with what’s being said. Messy narrates a celebration of complicated relationships, both to others and ourselves, and its production is appropriately all over the place in the best way.

The song’s absolute highlight is its closing minute. Flirting with key changes, it’s dissonant and experimental, toying with audience expectations right when they might start thinking they know what’s going on. The closing lyric, “I was lost but now I’m found”, moves up and down scales in a manner that ensures you can hear Psycho Gab’s impressive musicianship.

When Messy is over, listeners will be left with an intense craving to hear more, more, more from Psycho Gab! Keep an eye out for their future releases and live shows, as this single proves they’re an act not to be missed.

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About the author Danica Bryant

Sharply bitter and sickeningly sweet all at once, Danica Bryant is not your ordinary songwriter. Born to the fruitful music scene in Napier, New Zealand, her songs cover intense topics such as adolescence, mental health, sexuality, and young love. Danica Bryant is “all hard guitar and pain-filled howl” (The Hook NZ) – this woman bites back. Bryant played her first gig at age twelve. Her career ripened when Smokefree Rockquest awarded her the National APRA Lyric Award in 2018, for ‘Dizzy’. The following year, her track ‘Sugarbones’ featured on Play It Strange’s annual songwriting compilation album, and she won their national ‘Who Loves Who’ contest covering Aldous Harding’s ‘Horizon’. Bryant was also selected for mentorship by Bic Runga at her Christchurch Art Centre workshops. After opening for Kiwi legends like Jason Kerrison and Paul Ubana Jones, Bryant was cherry picked to support Elton John on his ‘Farewell Yellow Brick Road’

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