She represents the girl who has read all the romance novels but realized real life doesn't come with a third-act reconciliation. She is the voice for the listener who wants to feel something—even if that something hurts. If you are a fan of Purity Ring’s intimacy, EKKSTACY’s rawness, or Ethel Cain’s storytelling, Club Sweethearts featuring Hazel Grace is your next obsession.
Her vocal delivery is a tightrope walk between apathy and anguish. On tracks like "Cigarette Daydreams (Club Edit)" and the original "Neon Bleed," she doesn't just sing the lyrics; she exhales them. There is a distinct heaviness to her tone—a world-weariness that feels shockingly authentic for an artist operating in the hyper-digital sphere. In an era where many electronic pop lyrics rely on repetitive hooks, Hazel Grace writes like a novelist trapped in a DJ’s body. She cites Richard Siken and Mitski as influences, and you can hear it. club sweethearts hazel grace
She is not trying to save the genre. She is trying to save the feeling. She represents the girl who has read all