Sorry's anticipated new album Anywhere But Here will be out next month, and they've just shared another track from it. "Key to the City" is a great example of what Sorry do so well, combining elements of slinky R&B into dark, gritty indie rock that the band say they wanted to feel "cinematic and lonely.”
“‘Key to the City’ is a song that stemmed from a very specific situation in my life but that I hope has a more universal resonance," Sorry's Asha Lorenz says. "It’s meant as a kind of tender ‘fuck you’ at the dying moment of a relationship you don’t necessarily want to end - when it’s hard to reconcile feelings of anger, jealousy, resentment etc. with the undeniable love you still have for that person. That crossover of pride and vulnerability led me to an image of a deer in the headlights. It’s about trying your hardest to retain control when you know you’re exposed emotionally, sexually, spiritually, everything. In the nude of the headlights, in the nude of someone’s love.”