ENERGY WHORES Hey Hey Hate!
- Patrick

- Aug 1
- 2 min read

Energy Whores return with a vengeance on their incendiary new single “Hey Hey Hate!”, a chaotic yet razor-sharp electro-punk anthem that refuses to let listeners remain passive. Emerging from the creative depths of New York’s underground, the duo of Carrie Schoenfeld and Attilio Valenti ignite a genre-defying firestorm that mixes theatrical protest, biting satire, and beat-driven rebellion. This isn’t a track you simply listen to it’s one you absorb, wrestle with, and ultimately feel rattled by. In a time of cultural fracture, “Hey Hey Hate!” doesn’t whisper warnings it screams them through a megaphone made of synths and fury.
The production on “Hey Hey Hate!” is as volatile as it is calculated. Throbbing bass lines collide with digital distortion and percussive blasts that echo both club and combat zones. Guitar stabs punctuate the arrangement like sonic shrapnel, while layers of synth swirl in disorienting patterns, mimicking the confusion of a media-saturated age. Energy Whores construct a sonic battlefield where every glitch and drop serves a purpose: to unnerve, to provoke, to jolt you out of comfort. It’s tightly coiled chaos the musical embodiment of social collapse viewed through a strobe light.
The track walks a fine line between performance and confrontation. The delivery is theatrical yet deliberate each phrase lands like a well-aimed blow. Schoenfeld’s voice doesn’t beg to be heard; it demands it. She doesn’t just sing the words she dissects them, turning each line into a scalpel cutting through layers of ideological confusion. There’s no room for ambiguity in the tone just sharp, clear urgency. It’s this balance of stylization and substance that elevates “Hey Hey Hate!” beyond protest music and into the realm of political theater.
Energy Whores are at their most unflinching. The song doesn’t tiptoe around difficult subjects it sprints straight into them, targeting everything from hate-fueled media rhetoric to willful social ignorance. But beneath the fury, there’s always intention. Instead of wallowing in dystopia, the song offers motion a beat that drives forward, echoing a call to act. “Hey Hey Hate!” is less a condemnation and more a provocation: what are you going to do now that you’ve heard it? With this release, Energy Whores don’t just deliver a message they dare you to respond.
Written by Patrick










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