Detroit rock quintet Eva Under Fire are about to unleash their most ambitious, vulnerable, and absolutely crushing record to date with Villainous, dropping on July 10, 2026, via Better Noise Music. If you thought their 2022 debut Love, Drugs & Misery pushed boundaries, then strap yourselves in, because this new 13-track monster completely redraws the map. It is a gritty, cinematic concept album built from the ashes of self-destruction and forged into a massive, heavy anthem of reclaiming power.
Led by frontwoman Amanda Lyberg – who masterfully balances her dual life as a licensed therapist and a powerhouse rock vocalist – the band dives straight into the darkest corners of human emotion. They have traded compliance for complete defiance. Nowhere is this more obvious than on the blistering title track, featuring a monumental vocal pairing with Maria Brink of In This Moment. It is laced with late-’90s industrial crunch combined with a fierce, modern punch that proves standing up for your truth sometimes means looking like the bad guy to everyone you left behind.
From the explosive opening salvos of Awakening to the unapologetic, venomous delivery of Murder Scene, Villainous is an unflinching look at grief, identity, and hard-won self-acceptance. This isn’t just standard radio rock; it’s a statement of absolute confidence from a band that has already amassed over 100 million streams and dominated the Billboard charts.
HEAVY caught up with the phenomenal Amanda Lyberg to dissect the creative chaos behind the record.
“It’s an exciting time,” she enthused. “It feels like a long time coming. We spent two years writing this album, which feels like forever when you’re so focused on playing live shows. It feels really great to finally be at a point where we’re releasing it and getting back into the swing of things and seeing all our hard work come to fruition.”
We ask Amanda to tell us what Eva Under Fire were going for musically with Villainous.
“Album one felt great, but it felt like there were a lot of people telling us what we were supposed to be doing,” she sighed. “So this time around, it was way more important for us to say no, we’re gonna throw out the rule book and do what we wanna do. We wanna say what we wanna say. We wanna say it how we wanna say it. And I was very excited that my guys were all happy, it was going to be more of an Amanda kind of lyrics on this album. I feel like it was more poetic; I feel like it was darker and grittier and had a lot of honest themes. It felt more like a self-discovery journey and a lot more authentic than the first record. We really felt like we were stepping into our own writing this album.”
In the full interview, we explored the singles released and how they represent the album, the more personal nature of the lyrics and how Villainous differs from their debut album Love, Drugs And Misery. Amanda talks about her vocation as a professional therapist and how the music world combined with that side of her personality in the creative process.
Amanda also spoke about the ambiguity in the album title, as well as the charity that Eva Under Fire donated portions of their takings to for the title track. We talked about the band’s transition from being a garage band to now playing stadiums and how that has impacted dynamics along the way, their current massive tour and the chances of it coming to Australia and more.
Pre-order Villainous HERE.




