Meet Devon Again, the Alt-Pop Renegade Charting Her Own Path Forward
Photo: Max Christiansen
If alternative pop is a revolution, Devon Again is the gloriously deranged renegade leading the fight.
21-year-old artist Devon Again hit the LA music scene in 2021 with the Tiktok hit âSuburbiaâ and has since hit the ground running with a colorful discography of R&B-infused melodies and biting indie-pop production.
âBurn Downâ showcases the artistâs coy lyrical tone, spinning the absurd scenario of her apartment burning down into a hooky commentary on LAâs ruthlessness. The post-chorus breakdown in âBroke Mine Tooâ will never hit less hard, but âHEADâ exemplifies Devon Againâs production flair. Though the song starts mellowly, by the end, it blossoms into an explosive rush of emotion, like weâre feeling first-hand all the undefinable thoughts in her head.
Thereâs something in the slight obscenity of Devon Againâs humor that adds an unexpected element of genuineness to her music. Her stories are raw, but in a charismatic way rather than crudeâlike this is the first time theyâre being told aloud. We get to be vulnerable alongside her, using sarcasm to mask our nakedness and enlisting headbang-able production to say what words wonât.
Devon Againâs live shows embody this spunky sensitivity. I had the pleasure of seeing her open for JAWNY and Wallice at the El Rey Theater earlier this month, and it was deliriously cathartic. To set the scene: a blue-haired doll head hangs from the mic stand, matching Devon Againâs signature blue to a tee, and the artist asks the crowd, âHave we done our affirmations today? No? Well, weâre not fâing doing them here.â Devon Againâs set is not one for gentle, poignant thoughts. This is a live show where you leave feeling like youâve just checked out of an alt-pop rage room; the line between laughing and crying blurs in the mad therapy of the music.
During the acoustic rendition of her most recent single, âgum,â the band takes a quick break to eat goldfish crackers out of the toilet bowl thatâs center stage (and stocked with snacks, of course). Devon Again also celebrated the release of the âgum v6.4â music video which, in a world of short-form content and even shorter attention spans, is an absolute must-watch.
âgum v6.4â stars Robert Rexx, a long-haired tank of a man whoâs sat in his La-Z-boy watching Devon Againâs home videos, trying to replicate the feeling of them from his living room. The home video aesthetic captures the nostalgia of looking back on a relationship but also showcases a side we donât often think about: the hollowness of seeing your own memories documented and the coldness of knowing youâll never experience them the same way again. This music video is a tangible portrayal of Devon Againâs mosaic mind and the truly unbridled bounds of her talent. Devon Again creates art that isnât made for the clout of uniqueness but is overwhelmingly unique nonetheless.