Madi Diaz lyrics
Artist · 337 211 listeners per month
Artist's albums
give me hell
2023 · single
Be Careful
2022 · single
Love Looks Different
2022 · single
Hangover
2022 · single
Same History, New Feelings
2022 · EP
Crying In Public (MUNA Remix)
2021 · single
History Of A Feeling
2021 · album
Nervous
2021 · single
New Person, Old Place
2021 · single
Man In Me
2021 · single
While My Guitar Gently Weeps / Let It Down
2019 · single
It's Okay To Be Alone
2018 · EP
Such Great Heights
2017 · single
The One That You Want
2017 · single
Control
2015 · single
Mess (Jensen Sportag Remix)
2015 · single
Phantom
2014 · album
The Other Side (Speak Remix)
2014 · single
The Other Side (Remixes)
2014 · single
Does It Rain (Where You Are)
2012 · single
I Hope That It Snows (feat. Keegan DeWitt)
2012 · single
We Threw Our Hearts in the Fire
2012 · album
Plastic Moon
2012 · album
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Biography
Rage, confusion, despair, self-deception, and introspection—Madi Diaz cycles through the full spectrum of emotions on History Of A Feeling, her debut on ANTI-. It’s an album that undeniably marks Diaz’s status as a first-rate songwriter, a craft she’s spent years refining, and one wherein Diaz establishes herself as an artist capable of distilling profound feelings with ease. On History Of A Feeling, Diaz comes to terms with the dissolution of a meaningful relationship. By the end of it, she wills herself into a self-reflective state where she doesn’t hate herself for being so heartbroken. She plays the line between the personal and the general with dexterity: in Diaz’s hands, quiet moments of self-pity are transformed into grand meditations on heartbreak, and unwieldy knots of big existential feelings are smoothed out with a sense of clear-eyed precision. Diaz pulls from a range of folk, country, and pop leanings—she is as much influenced by Patty Griffin and Lori McKenna as she is the sonics of PJ Harvey and directness of Kathleen Hanna. Her strikingly honest lyrics describe crying on the Brooklyn-bound M train and the boiling point level of resentment that builds up after months of ambivalence. It’s relatable to anyone who has experienced heartbreak and great change in some manner, and this sense of intimacy and camaraderie she seamlessly weaves into the songs was important to her.