7/10
On her latest collection 'Finding It Hard to Explain Something So Obvious', NYC-based artist Nathania Rubin, under the moniker Agora Sci-Fi, makes a striking debut that feels both intimate and allegorical. The five-track EP is a dreamlike excavation of contemporary malaise, filtering the drudgery of capitalist routine through foggy guitars, analog textures, and the strange charisma of its central character “Z”, a slippery, half-amnesiac antihero caught between family dysfunction and late-stage burnout.
Musically, the record inhabits a space between the homespun weirdness of early Liz Phair and the lo-fi indie ethos of artists like Frankie Cosmos or Dear Nora. Her sound is humid, porous, and deliberately imperfect, creating a kind of DIY mysticism where every tape hiss and muffled vocal feels intentional, even sacred.
Throughout the EP, the lyrics tackle the invisible weights of daily life: the quiet exhaustion, the disconnect from meaning, the surreal bureaucracy of just getting by. But rather than hammering the listener with slogans, she leans into poetic opacity. There are moments that feel like overheard confessions, interrupted thoughts, or a half-remembered voicemail from someone you miss but can’t quite name.Tracks like 'sloppy' blend deadpan melancholy with sharp-eyed observations, while the production lingers in that magical liminal space between homemade and cosmic. It’s pop music, yes, but not in the Spotify-core sense. It hits to the gut like a late-night thought scrawled in the margins of a bus transfer.
Ultimately, 'Finding It Hard to Explain Something So Obvious' feels like a protest album disguised as a character study, or maybe the other way around. It doesn’t shout for change, it quietly wonders why we’ve all settled for so little. And in doing so, Agora Sci-Fi delivers one of the most quietly radical lo-fi debuts of the year.