Featuring Squid, The Horrors, Sorry, Wu-Lu, Famous, Nana Yamato, Folly Group, VLURE, Regressive Left, The Lounge Society, Enola Gay and more.

Featuring Squid, The Horrors, Sorry, Wu-Lu, Famous, Nana Yamato, Folly Group, VLURE, Regressive Left, The Lounge Society, Enola Gay and more.
Interest in the jarring juxtaposition between the natural and technological has blossomed as quickly as advances in applied science have developed. Our very balance of reality and the virtual now blurs into its own microcosm, defining itself from its very…
What’s been so invigorating about Katy J Pearson’s work so far is her unquestionable ability to write so empathetically from such a personal perspective. Her songs unconsciously capture a knotty feeling of hope and understanding, melancholy and doubt, like a…
It feels slightly superfluous to talk about this sort of thing right now, but Squid signing to Warp Records feels pertinent. The group have consistently bucked the general idea that people have about them – nearly veering off a constant cliff-edge…
We’re not sure there are many more ways to introduce these ‘”strange” and “unprecedented” times, but it’s certainly weird and Covid-19 is having a massive effect on the independent bands, artists and labels around us. The bands we all know…
We are all gathered here today to commemorate the closing affair of this year’s, ‘BBC 6 Music Festival’ at London’s Electric Ballroom. Swaggering with the undergrounds smartest – because everyone knows you can’t do Camden without an added bit of…
In its first year, Wide Awake Festival is shaking things. Not only is the line up an alternative dream, the festival is leading the way with it’s environmental promises and committing to zero landfill waste, a ban on single use…
2019’s festive cheer will be soured with televised debate and family unrest during what could be the most important election of our times. This time around, we speak to Swim Deep (Birmingham/London), Squid (Brighton/London), Photographer, Holly Whitaker (London) and Matt Maltese (London).
Festival season is in full swing and Suffolk’s, Latitude celebrated a sell out year in 2019. Headliners such as Lana Del Rey and Stereophonics pulled in the masses, but beneath those big names were some of the most exciting bands…