Brooke Henzell’s “Cold Angel” starts from a collision between two books read back to back, both circling paranoia and alienation, and finds that the emotional world they share already had a soundtrack. PJ Harvey and Portishead provided the coordinates. The song began as vocals and piano, a strange ballad, before producer John McHugh added instrumentation that pushed it into different territory.
What the ABOUT describes, without quite naming it, is a process of recognition: the paranoia in the books matched something already present in the music Henzell was absorbing, and the song became the point where those two currents met. A strange ballad is a particular object, voice and keys holding a feeling that resists resolution. McHugh’s additions kept the strangeness intact and pushed it toward something the ABOUT calls cool, strange, fun, and beautiful, four words that do not usually occupy the same sentence.
The Australian-born, New York-based musician works in a space the press materials call dreamy rock with vintage pop instincts. Harvey and Portishead are not casual references; their work uses beauty as a container for discomfort, and that lineage shapes what “Cold Angel” is reaching for. The title holds its ground at the end. Cold is the condition. Angel is the shape it takes.





