Paranoia. Lindemann's musical taste was cemented by the Evanescence and No Doubt CDs her mom would blast in the car when the singer was young. "I grew up in a family that listened to rock, metal and alternative music, so that music comes naturally to me. I've connected with it," she says. Paranoia — a collection of emo-laced pop-punk tracks featuring intimate lyrics seemingly ripped straight out of the artist's diary — bucks against the current glossy pop zeitgeist, hearkening back to a time (mainly the late '90s and early '00s) when women on the radio were slamming the pain away on their guitars while simultaneously inspiring an entire generation of Hot Topic-dwelling mall rats to flip the bird at suburban conformity.