Meet Psyclo, a sonic shapeshifter born in Yingkou, China, raised in Shenyang, and now unapologetically making noise in Los Angeles. With a background in filmmaking and screenwriting, Psyclo didn’t enter music through the front door; she crashed through a side window, headfirst. What began as a cinematic dream twisted unexpectedly into melody and distortion, as she found her voice not in front of a camera, but behind a mic. Psyclo is a singer-songwriter, record producer, and audio engineer all rolled into one — and her latest track, “Everybody Sucks,” proves she’s a creative force that thrives in chaos.

The title alone punches you in the gut. But it’s not just rage for rage’s sake; it’s rebellion wrapped in clarity. “Everybody Sucks” is Psyclo’s middle finger to fake faces, failed connections, and the weight of false expectations. But instead of sulking, she scorches. The song doesn’t wallow in frustration; it weaponizes it.

From the first second, the production hits like a jolt: gritty, distorted guitars tear across the mix, matched with hard-hitting drums that feel like they were built to rupture silence. There’s a punk rock spirit here, but it’s dressed in a modern alternative skin. The arrangement is smart — deliberately raw, yet surgically tight, like a storm that knows exactly where to strike.

Then Psyclo’s voice enters — not so much singing as baring teeth. Her vocal tone is sharp and unfiltered, laced with a do n’t-mess-with-me honesty that feels rare and needed. You get the sense she’s not performing — she’s releasing. Her delivery is emotionally charged, unpolished in the best way, like she’s been waiting her whole life to scream this song into the void. And somehow, in all the fury, there’s melody — catchy enough to stick, biting to sting.

What makes Psyclo compelling is her total control of chaos. She engineered and produced this song herself, which makes the rawness feel even more intentional, like she’s not trying to impress anyone, but to express. Every sound, every silence, is a creative decision. And you can feel her background in film bleed into the sonic storytelling: this track plays like a close-up monologue after a long, tense buildup.

“Everybody Sucks” is not a track that asks politely to be heard. It demands it. It’s the kind of song you blast in your car after a day that drained your soul — a cathartic purge, a reminder that it’s okay to feel everything loudly. Psyclo isn’t just here to make music — she’s here to make noise that matters. And if “Everybody Sucks” is your introduction to her world, buckle up. She’s just getting started.

Listen to “Everybody Sucks” on Spotify

Follow Psyclo here for more information

Facebook

Instagram

YouTube