Suicide Songs
On their second album, the goth-influenced Manchester rock band MONEY shines a light on the crisis of identity that often befalls creative folk during their late twenties (or, occasionally, their thirties or forties)—Who am I? What do I really have to say? And how can I figure it out without somehow destroying myself?
The Manchester trio's Jamie Lee channels personal turmoil in unflinching fashion on a stirring second LP.
An album that’s excellent at times, but which arrived with preconceptions so strong that could never be matched.
Suicide Songs sees MONEY perfect what they started to build on their debut, sounding bigger, brighter and possibly even more beautiful than before.
Given its title, you'd be forgiven for assuming that MONEY's second album 'Suicide Songs' was a dour or morose record - even the artwork
Manchester’s Money go all-out epic on their second album, a mix of existential dread and euphoric eruptions