Do you remember what teenage years felt like?
It was constant feeling of not being able to put a finger on it. It floats through your body for years until you can make sense of it. And it’s the inability to make sense of a system that does not think of you but thinks for you.
The album TEENAGEANGST is a lot like this feeling. The album art even shows Ban$hee suspended in air with his guitar, hovering over what looks like a parked plane. He leaps outward, almost bursting into the frame, just as anger leaps out of you in moments when control slips away.
Tuning into his track called Finger Food,the drums kick in from the very first second, sharp and relentless. They carry the same urgency Travis Barker brought to Blink-182, setting the stage for a track that refuses to sit still. Finger Food is BruceBan$hee hurling his anger straight at the system.
The drums feel punk in their drive, while Ban$hee’s rap recoils against them, creating a collision of energy. The track exists in a crossover space: it enters through punk rhythm, slides into rap cadences, and then swerves into rock, a chaotic yet deliberate progression that keeps the listener on edge.
BruceBan$hee has been writing, recording, and producing his album TEENAGEANGST. The Maryland-based artist thrashes at a system that does not subdue him but subjects him to a kind of confusion and helplessness that reflects his teenage angst.
A recent “Hot Picks” blog feature places BruceBan$hee firmly in the alternative rock sphere. The same piece highlights TEENAGEANGST as an alternative-rock EP, presenting him as a rising voice unwilling to compromise.
With Finger Food, he captures the raw, restless energy of adolescence, channeling confusion, anger, and defiance into something you can feel from the very first beat.





