Life has felt starkly contrasted for Nova Twins of late. Both within the band and their lives around it, there have been soaring highs, and challenging lows. While 2020’s Who Are The Girls? debut was an introduction to the two and 2022’s Supernova was a celebration of their power, Parasites & Butterflies is a pause for reflection that looks at the juggle of success and pressure.
The skill and musical innovation of Nova Twins is outstanding, and arguably not discussed enough. On their third studio release, Amy Love and Georgia South weave between outrageously distorted and serene soundscapes. Georgia’s bass tone, not only disgustingly good, is a storytelling tool: in one instance it’s slurring and drenched in gloopy, thick fuzz, and then in other pockets it snaps awake, crunchy and computerised, but alive like a robot driven on revenge.
Amy experiments with classical operatic vocal wails on opener Glory, while elsewhere her vocals become like fight talk, are enunciated with the confident cries of the Supernova era. This approach is present within Soprano, which taps into the power of womanhood, and Drip, which takes ownership and pride in triumph and material reward. Towards the end, Hurricane and Black Roses act in dual as a conclusion, both summarising their strength, and opening up the portal to a new chapter. ‘Keep the pressure on, ’cause we ain’t going nowhere,’ sings Amy on the former.