Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Ethel Cain’s cover of “For Sure” is beautifully intense and entirely original 

|
|

Score: 5/5 

Turning the original three-minute track into almost 10 minutes of beautifully heavy ambience, Ethel Cain masterfully brings a completely new and mesmerizing soundscape to the Midwest emo classic “For Sure” by American Football. 

In late July, revered Midwest emo band American Football announced two new versions of their debut album American Football to be released on Oct. 18 for the album’s 25th anniversary.  

Alongside a 2024 remaster of their magnum opus, the band is releasing a collection of other artists’ covers of their songs, each remade with their own stylistic flares. 

Ethel Cain’s cover of “For Sure” came out on Sept. 5 as the second single from American Football (Covers). The track begins by setting the tone of the rest of the song. Synth notes come in one by one, overlapping to create a wholly enveloping atmosphere of sound.  

After taking 30 seconds for the sound to ease into full volume, the iconic deep string plucking progression, seemingly the only element aside from the lyrics that are used from the original song, slowly comes in. Each chord echoes on its own before the next is plucked, emphasizing the intense heaviness of the sound. 

The bass line repeats endlessly as the synth notes play lightly in the background. Close to the two-minute mark, Cain sets the scene of the track as the faint sound of birds chirping in the distance briefly enters the song, sounding like the faded remnants of a wistful memory. 

The lyrics begin after the first two minutes. Cain’s voice floats over the guitar as she slowly sings “June seems too late / delayed,” drawing her voice over each vowel and dominating the sound of the track. 

As the lyrics continue, Cain’s layered voice becomes more of an instrument in the track, almost indistinguishable from the synth but distinctly conveying the message behind the song’s heavy hum as she sorrowfully questions if her circumstances are “maybe for the better.” 

She beautifully communicates the speaker’s built-up angst toward the still vague situation they are in, longing for something unreachable yet bitterly aware that nothing can be done except accepting things as they are. 

Exactly halfway through the song, all the tension built up over the first five minutes breaks when Cain asks “whether this uncertainty is / for sure” and a surge of heavy guitar replaces the synth as the driving force of the track. 

The song basks in the heavy guitar for several minutes as Cain continues to sing the words “for sure” repeatedly while a hypnotizing steady drum beat plays in the background. The middle of the song has an intensity that gives the sound a physical body, making it heavy enough to weigh down the listeners’ shoulders. 

The song begins to wind down eight minutes in as Cain’s vocals reclaim dominance on the track and the heavy guitar dissipates into the background. 

As her voice begins to fade out, the intensity of the song goes with it. When the instrumentals get quiet and the tension fades, Cain masterfully ends the song with the original string-plucking progression it began with. 

Trading angst for suspense and simplicity for a deeply layered sound, Cain transforms American Football’s track into an entirely new listening experience. While the original song uses a lighter sound and mostly relies on the lyrics themselves to tell the story, Cain’s version forces the listener to feel the story. She builds suspense through the sound and breaks the tension with a gut punch of abrupt heaviness. The song envelops the space around the listener before Cain’s voice comes in to tell the story behind the intensity. 

Cain’s rendition of “For Sure” is nothing short of beautiful. She skillfully maintains the original song’s core elements while adding a transcendental quality that makes it uniquely hers. This track is better described as an experience rather than simply a song and fantastically pays tribute to 25 years of American Football

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Harry Styles announces new album “Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally” 

After a series of mysterious circumstances, Harry Styles has finally announced the release of his newest album.

“Views”: A decade later  

In the wake of a new era in hip-hop, one of the most consistent and well-regarded artists of the century released an album that not only defined an entire country but changed the genre forever.  

Cavetown, The Paper Kites and Searows: three new albums to check out this week 

With any new year comes new music. Here are three new albums to check out this week. 

The shakeups, stirs and celebrity drama of the season’s best award show  

The 2026 award season has kicked off with the ever-chaotic Golden Globes. 

The cult of the cubicle: deconstructing Apple TV’s Severance 

Content warning: this article contains spoilers for season one and two of the Apple TV series Severance.  If you’ve ever worked in an office, you’re most likely familiar with the “Sunday scaries,” a specific kind of dread reserved for Sunday evenings as the anticipation of Monday morning creeps closer. This is the feeling of impending compartmentalization, that we must pack away our “real” self to become a functional, wage-earning employee for eight hours a day.

Our nostalgia for cringe and the obsession with 2016  

You might have noticed your social media feeds bombarded with the mannequin challenge, the Rio de Janeiro Instagram filter and the song Closer by The Chainsmokers. Unlike other throwback trends, the #2016 trend, which has now amassed over 2.3 million posts on TikTok, seems to be vying for something more intangible. While some speculate it’s a ploy to collect data for de-aging models, Gen Z appears more enthralled by the feeling that 2016 had.

My favourite songs released in 2025 

As a new year begins, let’s look at my top three favourite songs released in 2025. 

Your guide to the most anticipated releases of 2026 

2026 might just be the strongest year for film in recent memory.  From major films by legendary directors Christopher Nolan, Emerald Fennell, Greta Gerwig and Denis Villeneuve to a wave of hotly anticipated sequels, originals and adaptations, this year’s release calendar is stacked.