Hana Vu always wanted to be older. Now, at 21, sheâs had to find that adulthood isnât quite as freeing as it sounds. âI really was trying to grow up all the time throughout my teenhood,â says the LA singer-songwriter, just out of bed and chatting via Zoom from her sunny home. âNow I feel like Iâm finally as old as I ever thought I would be, and I wanna be younger again.â
Itâs an age-old feeling â superstars like Olivia Rodrigo and Billie Eilish have encapsulated it on a mainstream level in recent years â and one that stings even harder after key years and moments have been lost to the pandemic. But on her debut album âPublic Storageâ, Vu captures that disillusionment so vividly and viscerally that itâs brand new all over again. Take the menacing âEverybodyâs Birthdayâ: with striking vocals and subtly stubborn melodies that evoke Lorde and Lana Del Rey, she pulls you into a dimly-lit New Years Eve party thatâs more depression than debauchery.
âI was thinking that New Years Eve is kind of everybodyâs birthday; youâre reflecting on your life and you have hopes for the future, but youâre ultimately sad every time the year passes and you arenât who you wanted to be. That was sort of the ethos for that song.â
Writing the album (which follows up two EPs, 2018âs âHow Many Times Have You Driven Byâ and 2019âs âNicole Kidman/Anne Hathawayâ), Vu was moving between neighbourhoods in Los Angeles and at one point living in the shadow of a huge self-storage building; it was this structure that she named her album after. The building felt like a looming metaphor not just for her transitory circumstances, but for the stockpiled emotions in the songs she was writing. âSelf-storage is just a collection of my things that I accumulate over time, and thatâs what songwriting is to me â notes back to myself of experiences, and stuff I was feeling.â
Vu felt ungrounded in many ways: âI moved three times in one year or something. It was really hard to make friends and have a network of support. I think I was really obsessed with like, Iâm almost an adult, Iâm almost at this place where, when I was younger, I had imagined myself being something great. I was really desperate to get to a place in my life that I felt safe in, and comfortable. All I had was this conviction that I can make music and that it will propel me to be somebody that I wanted to be when I was younger.â
Her lyrics across the album probe at ideas of failure, evil, and worthlessness. âIâm nothing but the worldâs worst colour, I stain all your skin,â she sighs on âWorldâs Worstâ, while on closing track âMakerâ she begs a higher power: âCan you make me anybody else?â She was envisioning the perspective of someone completely downtrodden and hopeless, an extreme version of her own mindset. âI was thinking about, ‘How do I get to this next place, and who controls that?’. Sometimes you wonder if going through all these hard things is going to make you a better person, or if youâre just sort of taking punches every day. I think itâs hard to know that.â
She continues, âI didn’t grow up religious, but I always felt like, if there is some sort of God, heâs really mean. I felt this really punitive, oppressive force. I think the perspective [of the lyrics] is someone whoâs just very self-loathing, because when something tells you that you do not deserve good things, or a happy life, then inherently people think thereâs something wrong with them. Thatâs the perspective that I was writing from.â Strangely enough, at the time the brand new hopelessness of the pandemic hadnât even arrived yet. âI listen to how sad I was and Iâm like wow, this person wasnât even in lockdown.â

Vu start playing around LA in different bands when she was 14 years old, and she formed her musical identity at DIY shows, surrounded by punk and surf bands. But making âPublic Storageâ during lockdown led her to search for her own voice. âNot being around other musicians and musical context really just makes you have nothing to compare yourself to or work off. I just did what I wanted without influence.â
She dug into her pop sensibilities, trying to emulate the likes of St Vincent and Grimes in bringing her own edge to a pop framework. We hear that in the dancey synth hook of âAubadeâ or the big, dreamy chorus of âKeeperâ. âPop music is for everybody, so itâs interesting to see how everybody takes it, or where it goes,â she says.
She also wanted the albumâs sonics to be âbigger and more intenseâ than her previous work. Mostly, she wanted to subvert the way streaming culture encourages music to be taken out of context and tailored for short attention spans. âI wanted to make music that you canât ignore. On streaming there are a lot of playlists that are like, âSongs for when youâre taking a showerâ, âSongs for when youâre at the gymâ â just sort of a background score to your life. And Iâm more drawn to music affecting you versus accompanying whatever youâre doing.â
Assisted by co-producer Jackson Phillips of Day Wave, she achieved exactly that, an unsettling but captivating album that encourages multiple listens to really let it unfold; melodies build on themselves the longer theyâve been stuck in your head, and close listening to the production on tracks like âHeavenâ and âApril Foolâ reveals its careful crafting.
âI think it just felt really good to feel like I was good at something. And if I couldnât get everything else together, at least I could write a pretty concise song about how I was feeling,â says Vu, looking back at âPublic Storageâ from a new vantage point.
âI think when you remember your life in terms of the past, it always seems better than where you are now. Life changes, and you grow up. I think if you change your narrative in your mind, and youâre like, this is the narrative of your life â youâre the only one who lives it, so who else is gonna know?â Out from under that shadow, she begins to write the next phase of her life. âI think I have a lot of room to just keep growing up.â
Hana Vu’s new album ‘Public Storage’ is released November 5 via Ghostly International
The post Hana Vu: contemplative indie-pop captures the disillusionment of young adulthood appeared first on NME.