The Bapti$$ Unleashes “My Father’s Sins,” A Haunting Reckoning with Legacy, Ache, and Religious Battle, taken from Simply-Introduced Debut LP, Pop Cult(ure), out September twenty sixth
Following the soul-stirring launch of “Crazyglue and Skeletons,” The Bapti$$, the boundary-pushing musical rebirth of multi-instrumentalist Joseph LaPlante, returns with “My Father’s Sins,” a uncooked, introspective new single taken from his just-announced debut album, Pop Cult(ure), out September twenty sixth.
Anchored in aching guitar and a deep 808 heartbeat, “My Father’s Sins” is a confessional providing that digs deep into the scars of lineage, masculine silence, and the struggle for non secular freedom.
“I wholeheartedly consider in Generational Curses and contracts made with the Spirit World,” LaPlante reveals. “I took it on myself to interrupt my household tree freed from these shackles which have brought on a lot ache in my blood line.”
The track’s emotional centre lies in its refrain, a brutally sincere reflection on fatherhood, loss, and emotional repression.
“My dad taught me to endure in silence, so I all the time marvel if when he’s alone he truly does break down, shed a tear, and really feel the ache that life has introduced with all of the loss and struggles,” says LaPlante. “I do know for myself I’m the rock for my spouse and youngsters so my emotions, feelings, and ideas are all the time final to the well-being and happiness of my household.”
Haunting, considerate, and stressed, “My Father’s Sins” is one other stirring entry in The Bapti$$’s rising catalogue of deeply non secular, emotionally wealthy music. Every launch is guided by a fierce sense of function and a refusal to disregard the deeper forces at play.