PREORDER HUMAN™ - OUT MARCH 3
Distasteful Behavior is a high-bpm descent into the nocturnal world of excess and anonymity. Moving away from the generational trauma of his past, the narrator now seeks to lose himself in the "dark club propulsion" of the present. This is an album about the rush of being "exposed" under bright lights, the gritty reality of "party wounds," and the unapologetic pursuit of pleasure that society deems distasteful.
From the euphoric, inclusive chaos of "Ball Gags & Lingerie" to the invasive, relentless pulse of "Cum Dump Confessional," the record functions as a "Hard Reset" for the soul—choosing the "bad decision" every time because, in the heat of the moment, it's the only thing that feels real.
1. Distasteful Behavior
Theme: Reckless Intent
The manifesto. A fast-tempo opening that establishes the narrator’s new rule: head never gets a say, body hits first. It’s a deliberate crossing of the line into the raw and the unrefined.
2. Good Boy Gone Bad
Theme: Shattering the Mask
The moment the "straight and quiet" discipline snaps. It’s an aggressive, confident transition where old rules fall off like dead weight and restraint is left at the door.
3. Ball Gags & Lingerie
Theme: The Sanctuary of the Strange
A celebratory, inclusive anthem. This track captures the safety found in extreme self-expression—where drag queens, leather, and glitter create a space where the narrator finally doesn't have to "adjust" his shape to fit in.
4. Touch Me Where the Lights Are
Theme: Radical Visibility
A defiance of the "shadow." Instead of hiding his desires, the narrator demands to be seen in the full glare of the club lights, turning the gaze of others into a source of intensity.
5. Leave the Lights On T
heme: Refusal of Discretion
A companion to the previous track, this song explores the "rush" of being overexposed. Shadows are slow; light keeps the moment sharp and real.
6. Bad Decisions, Good Bodies
Theme: Physical Logic
A reckless, high-energy track about stepping past every warning sign. It’s the realization that while the "math" of the choice might be wrong, the physical sync is undeniably right.
7. Worth the Risk
Theme: The Cost of Connection
A shift into more intimate, physical energy. It’s about the deliberate choice of "unproductive" connection—ignoring the logic of tomorrow to ride the heat of tonight.
8. Club Drugs & Bad Decisions
Theme: Sensory Overload
The peak of the night. Distorted low-ends and overstimulated energy mimic the "bending lights" and "tight jaw" of a chemical rush where names blur and rules collapse.
9. Three Bodies Deep
Theme: Compression and Anonymity A hypnotic, heavy track about the loss of the "singular" self. In a crowded space, the narrator disappears into a stack of weight, heat, and pressure.
10. Stranger Inside Me
Theme: The Power of the Unknown
A dark, invasive pulse exploring anonymous intensity. It’s the pursuit of the "unfamiliar" weight as a way to lose the nerve and the past simultaneously.
11. No Kissing After
Theme: Detached Intimacy
A song about boundaries within the boundary-less. It’s a physical urgency that refuses to turn "personal," keeping the mood exactly where it belongs: in the rhythm, not the heart.
12. Cum Dump Confessional
Theme: Obsessive Submission
A relentless, grinding low-end track about discipline and use. It reclaims a derogatory term as a "confessional" space—not for forgiveness, but for a constant, humming pressure.
13. Double Ecstasy
Theme: Total Surrender
The most explicit and aggressive peak of the record. A heavy sub-bass exploration of "double desire" and being completely filled and claimed by multiple sources at once.
14. Hunger Without Name
Theme: The Perpetual Itch
A track about the compulsive nature of desire. It’s not about love or truth; it’s about a "crawling under the skin" that only stops when the pressure is applied.
15. One Night Stand at 4AM
Theme: The Restless Exit
The 4 AM buzz. While the body should be finished, the head is still wired, already "feeding what didn't last" and looking for the next hit before the first one settles.
16. Party Wounds
Theme: The Map of the Night
Gritty and physical. The narrator reads the bruises and marks on his skin like a "territory map," finding proof in the pain that the night isn't over yet.
17. Call Me When You’re Dirty
Theme: Reckless Availability
A digital-age anthem of "no cleanup." It’s an invitation to skip the pleasantries and match the "wrecked" state of someone else, leaning into the chaos without delay.
18. Afterparty on the Seventh Floor
Theme: The Second Wind
Sweaty, swaggering alt-rock energy. The club has closed, but the "elevators stay wide." It’s the sound of a hallway full of bodies refusing to let the morning in.
19. The Morning After Doesn’t Matter
Theme: The Loop
The final, sleepless track. As the light leaks in, the narrator doesn't reset—he restarts. He loops back into the city hum, chasing the same pull, proving the cycle is never truly "done."