Holy Fvck is rebellion as reaction. Aggressive, confrontational, and intentionally messy, the album finds Demi Lovato leaning fully into anger, provocation, and rock aesthetics. It’s cathartic in concept, but often chaotic in execution.
Sonically, the record dives into pop-punk, hard rock, grunge influences, and distorted pop textures. Guitars are loud, drums are heavy, and the production favors raw impact over refinement. While the energy is undeniable, the sound frequently feels one-note and exhausting across a full listen.
Lyrically, Holy Fvck centers on rage, sexuality, trauma, defiance, and self-destruction. Demi delivers with intensity and conviction, but the writing often leans toward shock value and repetition rather than emotional layering. Anger becomes the dominant color, with little variation in perspective.
The 2.9 rating reflects bold intention with limited payoff. The album has moments of power and authenticity, but its lack of nuance and melodic depth reduces replay value. Several tracks blur together in tone and aggression, weakening the overall impact.
Holy Fvck stands as one of Demi Lovato’s most divisive projects. Brave in direction and honest in emotion, but uneven and often overwhelming, it feels more like a release of tension than a fully realized artistic statement.
Favorite Track: 29
Skip Track: BONES
Disclaimer: This Is my opinion based on personal taste and emotions.
The skip tracks are not bad songs but just songs that are less memorable.
Sonically, the record dives into pop-punk, hard rock, grunge influences, and distorted pop textures. Guitars are loud, drums are heavy, and the production favors raw impact over refinement. While the energy is undeniable, the sound frequently feels one-note and exhausting across a full listen.
Lyrically, Holy Fvck centers on rage, sexuality, trauma, defiance, and self-destruction. Demi delivers with intensity and conviction, but the writing often leans toward shock value and repetition rather than emotional layering. Anger becomes the dominant color, with little variation in perspective.
The 2.9 rating reflects bold intention with limited payoff. The album has moments of power and authenticity, but its lack of nuance and melodic depth reduces replay value. Several tracks blur together in tone and aggression, weakening the overall impact.
Holy Fvck stands as one of Demi Lovato’s most divisive projects. Brave in direction and honest in emotion, but uneven and often overwhelming, it feels more like a release of tension than a fully realized artistic statement.
Favorite Track: 29
Skip Track: BONES
Disclaimer: This Is my opinion based on personal taste and emotions.
The skip tracks are not bad songs but just songs that are less memorable.

