According to Sulfur City’s Lori Paradis… “The album came together in many different moments. Stolen moments, borrowed moments and moments fought for. We are imperfect and vulnerable, frustrated and insecure. In the studio as the hours swiftly eroded away we pushed our boundaries, tested ourselves and took risks. We had something to say. And I wanted people to listen. I wanted the album to reflect what was gong on around me and inside of me. Some of the songs are very personal as in ‘One Day In June,’ and that feeling of abandonment and loneliness. The song ‘War Going On’ points at commercialism and the destroying hold it has on us. In the song ‘Whispers’ it reflects on the illusions of caring and love by friends and family after someone passes. A song written eight years ago, ‘You Don’t Know Me’ screams out that it’s time to say f*ck it and leave that life sucking relationship. We recorded the album live off the floor to tape because it forced us to play on the edge; we had to give it our all on every take and that comes across in the overall sound of the album. Rough around the edges, dirty, torn and raw.“