I Know I'm Funny haha
Faye Webster
Faye Webster makes music that sounds like it was recorded inside a pleasant memory. "I Know I'm Funny haha" is the title track of her 2021 album, and it functions as a kind of thesis statement: gentle, self-aware, shot through with a wry humor that never curdles into irony. The production is immaculate in its studied casualness — pedal steel guitar that weeps without melodrama, a rhythm section so soft it barely casts a shadow, piano chords that feel like they've been sitting in afternoon sunlight for several hours. Her voice is one of indie pop's great understated instruments: creamy and slightly flat in affect, like someone relating a story they've told before but still find mildly amusing. The emotional content hovers between self-deprecation and genuine self-possession — she is in on the joke about herself, but she is not diminished by it. The song lives in the particular Atlanta indie pop scene she helped define in the late 2010s and early 2020s, an aesthetic indebted to the Magnetic Fields and early Waxahatchee but warmer, more pastel, less interested in suffering. It is the song for a Sunday afternoon when nothing urgent is happening, when you are comfortable enough in your own company that you can afford to laugh at yourself a little. It rewards the kind of listening you do while doing something else — tidying, cooking, drifting — and somehow sounds better that way.
slow
2020s
warm, pastel, soft
Atlanta indie pop scene, influenced by Magnetic Fields and early Waxahatchee
Indie Pop, Soft Pop. Atlanta indie pop. nostalgic, playful. Stays gently self-aware throughout, moving from mild self-deprecation into quiet, comfortable self-possession.. energy 2. slow. danceability 3. valence 7. vocals: creamy female, understated flat affect, wry, casually detached. production: pedal steel guitar, barely-there rhythm section, sunlit piano chords, immaculately casual. texture: warm, pastel, soft. acousticness 6. era: 2020s. Atlanta indie pop scene, influenced by Magnetic Fields and early Waxahatchee. Sunday afternoon when nothing urgent is happening and you're comfortable enough in your own company to laugh at yourself a little while tidying or cooking.