The Dream Eaters Drop ‘Year End Report’ LP and Serve Surreal, Synthy Chaos on Lead Single “3D Printer” (Vagina Version)
Brooklyn, NY/Toronto, ON indie pop/new wave duo The Dream Eaters return with their new album Year End Report. A collection of their singles from 2024 and 2025, framed as a tongue-in-cheek yearbook, the LP is a self-portrait of a band who thrives on bending reality, blending humour with tightly crafted indie pop, and turning the bizarre into something undeniably catchy.
Year End Report is helmed by the gleefully outrageous lead single, “3D Printer” (Vagina Version). Equal parts electro-pop, synthwave, and surrealist humour, the song takes the band’s signature absurdism to a new high (or low, depending who you ask), imagining a future where 3D-printed vaginas are just another everyday convenience and turning that concept into a shimmering, danceable bop.
“We wrote ‘3D Printer’ in 2024 and made a social media video for it that used the lyric ‘I’m gonna 3D print your vagina with my 3D Printer,’” says Jake Zavracky (vocals/guitar/programming). “When we released it in 2025, we subbed in the word body instead of vagina. Our fans demanded the full vagina version, so here we are.”
Part tongue-in-cheek futurism, part deadpan earnestness, the track stands out within the duo’s catalogue not only for its title but for its balancing act: glossy pop production paired with a lyric no one was expecting.
“It’s not a lyric you’d normally hear sung with this sort of tune,” adds Zavracky. “It’s an electro-pop synthwave song about the future, when people will be able to 3D print vaginas.”
Stylistically, the band leaned fully into the contrast.
“We wanted a super pop song that would make people dance and also laugh – preferably at the same time.”
Since 2015, The Dream Eaters have evolved from a dream-pop band into a full-on video art project with an extensive catalogue of weird and darkly humorous music videos accompanying their catchy pop songs. The duo began working together after Elizabeth LeBaron, originally from Calgary, and Jake Zavracky, originally from Boston, met while bartending in Brooklyn’s Gowanus neighborhood.


