
Melbourne rock crew Freya and The Vikings aren’t here to play nice, and Eyeliner proves it. This is their second swing in the lead-up to a full-throttle 15-track album later this year, and it lands with grit under its nails and sweat on its collar.
From the jump, Eyeliner punches hard. The guitars snarl, the rhythm section locks in tight, and the whole thing barrels forward with a driving, late-night energy that good rock lives on.
What really sets this band apart is the triple-vocal attack. Three lead female vocalists trade lines, stack harmonies, and throw attitude like sparks off a grinder. It’s loud, bold, and unapologetic, flipping the usual rock band script and lighting it on fire. The vocals don’t just ride the track, they drive it.

You can hear the band’s wide rock DNA all over Eyeliner. There are nods to classic rock swagger, flashes of punk bite, and a modern edge that keeps it sharp instead of dusty. Freya and The Vikings aren’t afraid to blur eras, bend rules, and lean into the chaos, and that’s exactly why the song works.
There’s a live-wire feel baked into every second of this track. It sounds like it was built for sticky floors, ringing ears, and stages that shake when the chorus hits. No overthinking, no polish-for-the-sake-of-it, just raw energy and conviction.
Eyeliner doesn’t try to explain itself. It struts, swings, and leaves a mark. If this is just a taste of what Freya and The Vikings are cooking up for their album, then things are about to get loud in the best possible way.
Rock’s alive. And it’s wearing eyeliner. 🖤🤘
Listen to Eyeliner on Spotify
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