Collection: Margarita
Margarita’s debut album follows a slow descent shaped by memory, anger, and loss. Throughout the record, the trio explores aching bodies, fractured identities, and a past that never really goes away.
For this album, the band added synth layers and electronic percussion to their usual guitar, bass, and drums setup, bringing more depth and a strong sense of melancholy to the songs.
From “Blood Incantation”, where pain becomes a means of expression, to the hazy and melancholic “Melting Days”, the album explores loss on both personal and universal levels. Figures appear and fade: a lonely man, a disappearing self, memories of those who are no longer there. Themes of abandonment and refusal run through the record. “Not a Mother” rejects imposed roles and inherited expectations, questioning identities shaped by absence and anger. “Abyssal Pain” turns violence and resentment into a kind of epiphany, where destruction becomes a form of control. The album closes with “Better Off Alone?”, settling into a quieter form of solitude and the weight of unspoken wounds.