Margo Scout’s Shimmery Dream Pop Single “Otters” is a Song About Setting Boundaries and Not Getting Lost in Others or Yourself

Margo Scout, photo courtesy the artist

Margo Scout’s shimmery guitar work on “Otters” is like something you’d hear off a late 80s Cocteau Twins record—faintly luminous, transporting and impressionistic in arrangement. But it is joined by flecks of tonal percussion over the more expressive rhythms. All in support of Scout’s melodiously breathy vocals intoning introspectively about habits of codependency in a relationship and learning to set the boundaries for oneself not only to protect oneself from the behavior of others but also as a means of living a psychologically independent life. The concluding line of the song “Gotta learn to breathe by yourself, I can’t be your only hope” spells out the dynamic Scout has explored throughout the song and the way it can be easy, in pursuit of love and showing love blurring those lines of self in unhealthy ways that be harmful to everyone involved. It’s a hard lesson but Scout expresses it in such lush and gentle tones that the song doesn’t hit as stark and harsh, rather delivered with an affectionate spirit. The title of the song and the subsequent imagery also suggests a playfulness that may not be obvious at first and in that the song conveys that we’re learning a lot of this as we go and we can be kind in our mistake making. Listen to “Otter” on Spotify and follow Margo Scout at the links below.

Margo Scout on Facebook

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Author: simianthinker

Editor, primary content provider for this blog. Former contributor to Westword and The Onion.