Bizarrefae has returned with a new single, ‘Real Problems’, a darkly hypnotic track that pulls apart modern life and questions whether humanity has drifted too far from itself.

Released through Warren Records and produced by Hull electronic artist Endoflevelbaddie, the new single sees Bizarrefae continue to blur genre lines with complete disregard for convention. Built around grimy electronic grooves and eerie atmosphere, ‘Real Problems’ taps into feelings of alienation, burnout and frustration with a world that feels increasingly artificial.
Across the track, the Hull-based non-binary artist channels the urge to escape the endless noise of modern society, questioning whether progress has actually improved anything or simply replaced one set of problems with another.
Speaking about the release, Bizarrefae explained: “I wrote this track as an outlet for feeling disconnected from the so-called ‘real world’. For my entire life, I’ve been told ‘that’s just how the world is, but honestly, it feels like the world was never meant to be like this.”They continued: “Humans have this disturbing desire to disconnect themselves from the natural world and forget that we’re all part of it. ‘Real Problems’ is my attempt to reconnect with that hidden part of myselfunderneath all the societal noise.”

It’s another bold release from an artist who’s steadily carving out their own strange, confrontational corner of the underground. Pulling influence from punk, horrorcore, emo-pop and alternative electronic music, Bizarrefae’s sound feels deliberately unpredictable — somewhere between vulnerability, chaos and outright rebellion.
Artists like Alanis Morissette, Kimya Dawson, Zheani and Avril Lavigne all sit somewhere within the project’s DNA, but Bizarrefae twists those influences into something far messier and more theatrical. The artist, whose real name is Andromeda Atkins, has become known for openly discussing mental health, gender identity, religion and capitalism throughout their work, often leaning into controversy rather than avoiding it.
Having originally emerged from punk and folk roots, Bizarrefae’s partnership with Endoflevelbaddie through Warren Records has pushed the project into heavier electronic territory, transforming raw demos into something colder, sharper and far more unsettling.
‘Real Problems’ feels less like an escape from reality and more like staring directly into it.
