The Lazy Eyes share ‘How Does It Feel To Be In Love?’ from forthcoming LP Cheesy Love Songs
PRAISE FOR The Lazy Eyes
“Feature Album (triple j)”
“A playful display of perfectly crafted psychedelic rock”
“Psych-pop reverie ‘Imaginary Girl’ nods to the ‘60s’ mind-altered idealism, while the guitar-dueling freak-out ‘Where’s My Brain???’ uncovers all the paranoia that comes with it”
“Full of delicious builds, drops, and guitar work”
“Honest-to-god really good”
“The makings of a psych giant”
LP TRACKLIST
Ballerina
The One Who Got Away
Mr Histograph
You Were A Child
Always In The Back Of My Mind
How Does It Feel To Be In Love?
Never Will She Know
You’re The One
I Just Don’t Know You Yet
Keep Her By My Side
Every Day I Lay In Bed
‘How Does It Feel To Be In Love?‘ is out now, buy/stream it here.
The Lazy Eyes today share the latest preview of their forthcoming second album with new single ‘How Does It Feel To Be In Love?’, out today. Cheesy Love Songs LP will arrive on Aug 21 via AWAL. LISTEN HERE + WATCH HERE + PRE-SAVE LP HERE.
Inspired by the anthemic yet sincere piano-led anthems by Coldplay and the enduring influence of Brian Wilson, ‘How Does It Feel To Be In Love?’ is imbued with candor. Lyrically simple yet carefully profound, the group captures the universal highs and sobering lows of the multi-faceted concept while pulling on all our gooey senses. ‘How Does It Feel To Be In Love?’ lets your interpretation guide its polychromatic instrumental expression.
Songwriter Itay Shachar shares, “For me, this song is one of the main pillars of the album in terms of its message. It asks a very simple question but which is almost impossible to answer, or that everyone could answer differently. I really like that open ended nature. Sometimes I don’t know how it feels to be in love but I miss the times when I think I have been and I guess the song also has a yearning quality to it for that reason.”
In step with the ‘back-to-basics’ approach that culminated in their new album, The Lazy Eyes’ first release in four years, ‘The One Who Got Away’, was met with a stream of enthusiasm. Bringing it back to triple j Unearthed with a swathe of reviews, and free headline pub shows in Sydney and Melbourne to celebrate. With comments as “Oh how I’ve missed your pop‑psychaedelia” (Andy Gavrilovic, triple j Unearthed) to touring with Psychedelic Porn Crumpets nationally, with a packed out home show at The Factory Theatre, The Lazy Eyes’ return has illustrated just how ballads endure and that good things take time.
A music box – the first thing you hear on the album with the song ‘Ballerina’ – by its nature, isn’t easy to maintain; but with the right parts in place, its beauty is something to behold. Making Cheesy Love Songs represented a necessary struggle: Time to go back-to-basics, work out who The Lazy Eyes are in 2026, and return stronger than before. Inspecting each component of their craft, one by one, and trying on a series of recording and production approaches for size. Cheesy Love Songs proves The Lazy Eyes are naturals when it comes to writing songs that feel unaffected and resonant – even with as saturated a subject as affection.
Named in homage to the first track they put out, ‘Cheesy Love Song’, the album feels like a love letter to the classic pop form: a collection of rose-tinted missives that deal in swelling choruses and yearning, bittersweet lyrics that are both ornate and carefree. Their creative adulation for technical wizards who never let that proficiency get in the way of heartfelt songwriting shows just how they thrive. Minimalism, representing who they are right here, right now, and without the baggage of expectation, is how The Lazy Eyes make good on the promise of their debut. Cheesy Love Songs captures complex feelings and experiences in a way that feels simple and real above all else.
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