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"Self Esteem" is a song by American punk rock band the Offspring. It is the eighth track and second single from their third studio album, Smash (1994). The song was released on 22 December 1994 by Epitaph and was a worldwide hit, reaching number one in Iceland, Norway, Latvia and Sweden.
Rebecca Lucy Taylor (born 15 October 1986), [1] also known by her stage name Self Esteem, is a British musician, songwriter and actress. [2] First known as one half of the band Slow Club, she launched a solo career as Self Esteem with the single "Your Wife" in 2017, followed by the albums Compliments Please in 2019 and Prioritise Pleasure in 2021.
Smash, as well as the singles "Come Out and Play", "Self Esteem", and "Gotta Get Away" have a common artwork theme: an ominous (and highly distorted) skeleton on the cover, disc, and back of the CD case. The music videos for "Self Esteem" and "Come Out and Play" also have several scenes with a similar skeleton. This symbol is believed to ...
Bleachers is the fourth studio album by American rock band Bleachers, released on March 8, 2024.It is the band's first album under Dirty Hit and their own label, Bleachers Band Recordings, having departed from former label RCA Records in August 2023.
On 24 May 2024, Hill released the song "True Colours" with British singer-songwriter Self Esteem as the sixth single from the album. [11] "Multiply" was released on 31 May 2024 as the album's seventh single. [12] [13] A "rave edit" of the song was released on 5 July 2024, followed by a CamrinWatsin remix the following week.
Bustle writer Sabienna Bowman called the song "a masterpiece of musical achievement" saying that the song "either about sex or self respect, depending on who you asked — was the anthem of the summer 1999". [75] Bowman added that the song is "still everything that was so good about '90s pop music". [75]
In October, Self Esteem released "You Forever", the final single preceding the album [33] which was released on 22 October 2021. Prioritise Pleasure received widespread acclaim from music critics . At Metacritic , which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has an average score of 92, based on 12 ...
The piano ballad "Beautiful", which talks about the theme of self-respect, was deemed as the album's highlight by many critics, who praised its overall production. [16] [19] The next track "Make Over" is a salsa and dance-rock song that features a garage-rock beat. [22]