Music / dA-Zed guidesMusic / dA-Zed guidesMUNA on horniness, eggs, and Ronald ReaganWe chat to the trio following the release of their new self-titled album, in the latest episode of the dA-Zed guide to being...ShareLink copied ✔️September 15, 2022September 15, 2022TextSerena Smith H is for horny, according to Josette Maskin. “MUNA’s new record [...] says it’s OK to be horny,” she quips, in our new dA-Zed guide to being MUNA. The group’s third, self-titled new record, is an indisputably sexy album: it opens with “Silk Chiffon”, a song brimming with sapphic yearning. Then comes “What I Want”, an anthem about hooking up with leather-clad girls and taking ecstasy in gay clubs. “We recently found out people fuck to our music because a few people told us,” guitarist and producer Naomi McPherson says – and really, that’s no surprise. Created after the trio had been dropped by their label and re-signed with Phoebe Bridgers’ Saddest Factory Records – and released as the world began to emerge from the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic – it’s also a celebration of fresh starts, new beginnings and growth. Even the word ‘muna’ is Finnish for egg. “Finnish people have been very, very diligent in letting us know that over the years,” according to McPherson. The group take time for reflection on the album, too. The penultimate track, “Loose Garments”, is all about letting go of past pain. “It was like a weight that we needed to get off our shoulders,” singer-songwriter Katie Gavin shared in an interview with Dazed earlier this year. “Now, it’s like we’re just dancing around in the space that’s left after that.” Watch the full breakdown in MUNA’s dA-Zed guide above for more. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORECorridos tumbados: A guide to Mexico’s most controversial music genreSekou is the 21-year-old baritone making 70s soul cool againDon’t Be Dumb: The top 5 features on A$AP Rocky’s new album The rise of ‘Britainicana’: How Westside Cowboy are reshaping UK indieR!R!Riot is Taiwan’s pluggnb princessWhen did UK underground rap get so Christian? Why listening parties are everywhere right nowA night out with Feng, the ‘positive punk’ of UK UgDoppel-gäng gäng gäng: 7 times artists used body doublesWesley Joseph is the Marty Supreme of R&B (only nicer) How Turnstile are reinventing hardcore for the internet ageWill these be the biggest musical moments of 2026?