A short-lived group that wrote unflinching songs about mental health and self-destruction.
If you want to understand what they were about, start with "Ana" and "Castelo de Cartas." That's where their particular blend of psychological inquiry and melodic weight comes through clearest.
They took their name from Sigmund Freud and wrote directly about psychological territory most bands avoided. Songs like "Ana" tackled eating disorders head-on, sparking real debate about whether art should depict such struggles. Their two albums became touchstones for listeners who found rare honesty in lyrics about substance abuse and self-harm.
Formed in 2001 around singer Krystle Warren, they released The Only Thing Worse Than Death Is Dying Slowly in 2003 and Mirror Mirror in 2005. After six years of writing songs like "Castelo de Cartas" and "Heróis," they disbanded in 2007.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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