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Alexis Lace – My Tell-Tale Heart  
The bedroom has long been pop music's most fertile ground — from the four-track cassette demos that launched careers in the early nineties to the laptop-and-condenser-mic confessionals that defined the streaming age. Alexis Lace, a London-based singer-songwriter of considerable ambition, plants her flag firmly in this tradition with "My Tell-Tale Heart," the lead single from her fourth album *Silver*, and the results are rather more arresting than that modest domestic origin story might suggest.

Let us dispense with the obvious first. The title announces a literary debt — to Edgar Allan Poe's 1843 masterpiece of guilt and psychological disintegration — and Lace wears that influence not as affectation but as genuine structural armature. Where Poe's unnamed narrator is the perpetrator undone by his own festering conscience, Lace performs a neat and disturbing inversion: she is the victim, the metaphorically slain, addressing with unsettling directness the person responsible for her undoing. It is a productive reversal. The guilt, crucially, is displaced — it belongs to the listener's imagined antagonist — yet the emotional texture of the track pulses with the same barely-contained compulsion that made Poe's original so claustrophobically effective. That the song manages to encode this psychological complexity within something genuinely, shamelessly *fun* is no small achievement.


And fun it is. This is where "My Tell-Tale Heart" earns its most interesting distinction. The production — entirely self-constructed by Lace, who wrote, recorded, mixed and mastered the track alone in her bedroom — sits somewhere between late-period Soul II Soul and a sharper, more anxious strain of Acid Jazz. The groove is supple and knowing, with a rhythmic confidence that belies its domestic origins. It moves. It insists. The instrumentation carries the restlessness of someone who cannot quite keep still, which is precisely the emotional state the lyrics demand.


The song's history adds further texture. Originally conceived during the pandemic as an electric guitar-driven rock piece — written in the particular isolation that sent so many musicians inward and sideways — it underwent what one might charitably call a genre metamorphosis before arriving at its current form. That journey from rock to groove, from the angular to the sinuous, is not merely biographical detail; it is audible in the track's slight tension between propulsive forward motion and an underlying unease that never quite resolves. The rock impulse never fully left; it simply went underground, lending the production a tautness that pure Acid Jazz rarely achieves.


Lace's voice navigates this terrain with assurance. She does not oversell the emotional content — a temptation that has undone many a singer tackling heavy lyrical territory over upbeat production — but rather deploys a kind of controlled urgency, allowing the contrast between the track's buoyant pulse and its darker interior to do considerable work. The result feels like guilt dressed in its best clothes: presentable, even magnetic on the surface, quietly eaten away from within.


For a fourth album single, "My Tell-Tale Heart" displays the ease of an artist who has stopped proving herself and started simply *making* things. The DIY methodology — sometimes a constraint dressed up as a virtue — here reads as genuine artistic sovereignty. Every element of this track was a decision Lace made herself, and that intentionality tells. Nothing is accidental, nothing is filler, and the production's warmth sits in productive friction with its lyrical chill.