Lambrini Girls announce debut album ‘Who Let The Dogs Out’
The punk duo will drop one of 2025's first albums...
By Nick Reilly
Lambrini Girls have announced details of their debut album Who Let The Dogs Out – you can listen to the lead single ‘Big Dick Energy’ below.
The Brighton punk duo – Phoebe Lunny and Lilly Macieira – will release the 11-track record on January 10 next year via City Slang.
Not ones to shy away from tackling society’s ills, the powerful new track sees them take on toxic masculinity as they ask “how big is that dick in reality?“.
Elsewhere in the song, Lunny sings about women “apologising for [men’s] fucked up behaviour” and says: “I’m clutching onto my keys as soon as it hits 10:30 as it’s my sole responsibility to get home safely.”
In a statement, Lambrini Girls said of the song: “Man comes in many forms, from world leaders to tech CEOs and humble softboys. But what unites them? Society has celebrated their supposed massive figurative and literal dicks, which they constantly flaunt. Why? Toxic masculinity.”
They added: “Fuelling their sense of entitlement and insecurities leads to harmful behaviours. Which when left unchecked, means we have to deal with the fallout.
“The definition of ‘Big Dick Energy’ is a confidence that doesn’t need proving. Which begs the question, how big is that dick in reality? If you haven’t figured this out by now, it’s not that big.”
The upcoming album, meanwhile, “bottles everything wrong with the modern world and shakes it up” while also exploring “a laundry list of social ills”.
“You know how Fleetwood Mac almost dedicated ‘Rumours’ to their cocaine dealer?” the group said. “I think we should dedicate this album to all the booze we bought at Tesco.”
You can find the tracklist for the album below.
1. ‘Bad Apple’
2. ‘Company Culture’
3. ‘Big Dick Energy’
4. ‘No Homo’
5. ‘Nothing Tastes As Good As It Feels’
6. ‘You’re Not From Around Here’
7. ‘Scarcity Is Fake (Communist Propaganda)’
8. ‘Filthy Rich Nepo Baby’
9. ‘Special, Different’
10. ‘Love’
11. ‘Cuntology 101’
Over the summer, the group also caught up with Rolling Stone UK at Wide Awake Festival where they explained how their song ‘Boys In The Band’ takes aim at musicians who take advantage of their status to commit heinous acts.