The turn inward on 'Uno II' is mirrored across an album which, as the name might suggest, is more introverted than 2022's '
Cave World' with its satirical portraits of online weirdos and conspiracy theorists. "I think the last album was almost too conceptual for me," says Seb. "I just wanted to go back to being a bit simpler and a bit stupider, to get in touch with myself and move away from taking it so seriously." In doing so, album tracks like '
Store Policy' and '
Waterboy' call to mind the Viagra Boys of debut album '
Street Worms', with lyrics from the point of view of the kind of degenerate who is willing to 'steal a bike, make a couple bucks'. "Those songs, in part, draw from who I was when we started the band," he admits. "It's still who I am at the end of the day – I think everyone is a bit of their own Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. That's a relationship I used to find difficult, but now I'm more comfortable with the idea that we're all playing characters, in a sense.