Summer Cannibals lyrics
Artist · 5 470 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Can't Tell Me No
2019 · album
Summer Cannibals on Audiotree Live
2019 · EP
Behave
2019 · single
Can't Tell Me No
2019 · single
False Anthem
2019 · single
Full Of It
2016 · album
Simple Life
2016 · single
Full Of It
2016 · single
Say My Name
2016 · single
Go Home
2016 · single
Show Us Your Mind
2015 · album
No Makeup
2013 · album
Similar artists
The Courtneys
Artist
Great Grandpa
Artist
Stef Chura
Artist
Chastity Belt
Artist
Remember Sports
Artist
All Dogs
Artist
Ex Hex
Artist
Bully
Artist
Weakened Friends
Artist
Cherry Glazerr
Artist
Dude York
Artist
Priests
Artist
Cayetana
Artist
DILLY DALLY
Artist
Diet Cig
Artist
Speedy Ortiz
Artist
Charly Bliss
Artist
Thin Lips
Artist
Daddy Issues
Artist
Biography
Summer Cannibals’ fourth album Can’t Tell Me No is a defiant release whose very existence is the result of taking back power—after escaping a manipulative personal and creative relationship, guitarist/vocalist and bandleader Jessica Boudreaux chose to scrap an entire record that had been finished for over a year and start from scratch. Along with Cassi Blum, Devon Shirley, and Ethan Butman, Boudreaux wrote, recorded and mixed many of the new tracks during 14-hour days, emerging with Summer Cannibals’ first entirely self-engineered and produced album. The band formed in 2012 & gained a fervent following on the local Portland scene, eventually playing with some their musical heroes including L7, Mudhoney, and The War on Drugs, and touring with Ted Leo & the Pharmacists and Cursive. Along the way, they released 2013’s No Makeup and 2015’s Show Us Your Mind on their own label, New Moss Records, and 2016’s Full Of It on Kill Rock Stars. Pitchfork said that on Full Of It, the Cannibals “expertly balance flame-belching Mad Max riffage with lyrics frankly exploring questions of co-dependence and need.” Can’t Tell Me No is, as much as anything, about finding love and acceptance on the other side of pain. On a larger scale, Can’t Tell Me No stands up not just to a relationship or an industry, but to the people and constructs that have been trying to silence women and hold them down for so long. “It’s about doing the right thing,” says Boudreaux, “even when it’s terrifying.”