Paula T’s Hyperpop Single “Sugar Tits” Examines the Contradictions of Preserving One’s Identity and a Yearning to Be Desired

Paula T, photo by Viviane Eng

Paula T’s second single “Sugar Tits” (following “Canary”) begins with a bit of a statement of intention in a spoken word intro. But then the song with its surreal and at times whimsical melodies is couched in a driving beat that lends it the quality of a more straightforward pop song. But the whole thing is more than a bit subversive as the singer’s lyrics explore the contradictions of wanting to be desired and adored but also not wanting to be defined by what someone else desires and what they want you to be rather than who and even what you really are as a human that is never always completely one thing or another in the grand scheme of a lifetime. And how if you’re just human with genuine feelings that you don’t’ always express in a way that fits into some kind of commodified identity you might face rejection. Nevermind how you can’t be all things to anyone and how often you’re not enough for other people in the ways they expect. It’s a short song at two minutes eleven but Paula T seems to bake a lot of commentary and personal insight into a song that is also an undeniably fun and boundary-pushing hyperpop dance song. Listen to “Sugar Tits” on Spotify and follow Paula T on Instagram.

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Author: simianthinker

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