Blue-note guitar, shadowed harmony stacks, and Bel Cobain turning a relationship’s refusal to move on into the song’s real wound.
Uneasy and close to the skin, Bel Cobain opens “Change“ from inside a connection that should have let go already. “Only thing promised is change / But you stay” sits dead center in the record, and Bel treats that staying as the sickness, not the comfort. The feeling comes off overfamiliar, invasive, too settled in its own damage. Ms. Cobain keeps her voice near the mic and almost withholding, which is exactly why the line hits. She never pleads it up. She lets it sit there and make the room meaner.
Fred Cox gives her the right frame for that mood. The guitar keeps a blues pull in its tone, and the harmony stacks hang around the lead with a strange, low-hung air. When Cobain gets to “Seen the game / Hate the game / Love myself / Fuck the pain,” the track cinches up instead of spreading out. Smart choice. The restraint suits her. So does the cover, where the London-based singer blurs into two positions against that deep red field. Motion is there. So is the part that still cannot get free.
What lands best is the song’s refusal to dress up emotional limbo as loyalty. Even the small tension in the arrangement helps that point. When the drums arrive, the lift stays inward and contained rather than going broad, and that leaves Bel with pressure instead of release. In this case, that works. She makes being stuck sound sour, self-aware, and stripped of romance.
Credits
Producer(s): Fred Cox • Label(s): Brownswood Recordings • Release: 04/2024 • Album: Kizzy
