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There are multiple artists that perform under the name Honeycrash 1) Honeycrush is the solo project of New York singer-songwriter and poet Alexandra Antonopoulos. Characterized by evocative storytelling and raw, emotive vocals, Honeycrush blurs the edges of alternative and indie rock drawing on the influences of ‘90s permawave artists like Fiona Apple, Nirvana, PJ Harvey, and Jeff Buckley. On her debut EP MILK TEETH, Antonopoulos tries to reconcile the relationship between pain and growth, and instead of turning away from her flaws and worst days, takes a microscope to them. Obsessive longing, embittered grief, impotent rage, and the relentless pursuit of self-improvement are inescapable realities that Antonopoulos refuses to condemn. 2) Unique indie-pop band from Stoke who used to play a lot around the area in the early 1990's. Fronted by Nick Hawkes with Paul Baguley on lead, Roger Ginty (?) on rhythm guitar, Stuart White on bass and Steven French on drums, they were signed to Kite Records and released only one single, Kill Someone You Like in 1990, having recorded that at a small 8 track studio in Rugeley. Subsequent recordings made at Swallow Studios in Smallwood near Congleton never quite made it into circulation but were another step down the line in their progression. The band split after all too short a time when Steven went off to University in Scotland...but not before a glorious performance at North Staffs Poly when they headlined along with the Venus Beads a
# Why MILK TEETH Merits Your Attention Antonopoulos constructs something rare here: intimate sonic landscapes that refuse easy answers about suffering and transformation. Rather than aestheticizing pain into comfortable melancholy, she examines it with clinical precision, letting her vocals crack and strain alongside arrangements that shift between sparse vulnerability and dense texture. The album's central insight—that growth and damage are inseparable—finds expression not through lyrical statements alone but through her willingness to linger in uncomfortable emotional spaces. Positioned within the lineage of '90s artists who privileged authenticity over polish, MILK TEETH feels genuinely curious about its own contradictions, inviting listeners into a conversation rather than