Like it or not, there is no shortage of hype around Snail Mail’s Lindsey Jordan. When the New York Times hosted a roundtable of women in punk, the paper of record called her. She is the face of Spotify’s Badass Women playlist, snagged her first Pitchfork profile at seventeen and caught Rolling Stone’s attention as an emerging artist just over a year later. Not unlike contemporaries Lucy Dacus and Julien Baker, Jordan has carved out a space for herself with her raw, encompassing and powerfully emotive indie rock, in which she scans as both wise beyond her years and young enough to get caught up in the dizzying, world-encompassing fray of being twenty. Luckily for her listeners, her 2018 debut, Lush, contains all sides of her, each one more captivating than the next.