The Snuts are Deep Diving

Written by Millie Cain
Edited by Eve Moat

Smashing back into the indie rock scene, The Snuts return with new EP Deep Diving on 27th November 2023, after teasing the new release on Discord. The EP is the predecessor for their widely anticipated third album Millennials, which will be released on 23rd February 2024, from the band’s own label, Happy People Records. Lead singer Jack Cochrane describes it as “a raw exploration of our mortality, the ticking clock of our lives, and the consequences of being caught in the maze of one’s own mind.”  

Written and recorded on the road, between shows and in a makeshift studio in the Scottish Highlands, it has the band’s own punchy, fact-paced set up, but brings a fresh, vivacious sound with ‘Dreams’, a positive love anthem, and titular track ‘Deep Diving’ is built to play live, and facing the terrifying passing of time, Cochrane cast his own old man to play him in the music video. The EP closes with a re-release of their summer anthem ‘Gloria’ from June 2023, accompanied with an acoustic version. The Snuts are back to their recognisable social commentary with the anti-capitalist standout of the EP, ‘NPC’ that rallies against the soulless vacuum of everyday life.  

The band have never shied away from shouting about what they find is important, from their cry to rally release of single ‘Burn The Empire’ to their recent album announcement. They explained that “it’s super hard to be transparent as a band online in 2023…or even just as a human, and although our sound and the songs will always evolve and change, it’s been mad important to us that we stay true to the reasons we ever wanted to do this sh*t in the first place.” They’ve always been a band of the people, and recently sent out exclusive CDs to 250 of their discord fans, with my friend Matt receiving first release for tracks 4 and 9 and is “in on the secret first”. They even signed off the bold, heartfelt note “Love, THE SNUTS”.  

The Snuts are heading out for their UK headline tour and US headline tour in March, and headlining Liverpool’s Sound City Festival in May 2024. The album is launching with 2 nights at the iconic Barrowlands on 27th and 28th February next year.

The album is available for pre-order on their official website.  

The Utopiates End 2023 with New Single “Love Pill” 

Written by Millie Cain
Edited by Eve Moat

Branching into a more electronic, indie pop sound, The Utopiates released their new single “Love Pill” on the 16th November 2023, following their blinder of a debut album released earlier this year, “The Sun Also Rises”, available on all streaming platforms. Leeds born lead singer Dan Popplewell, described the influence for the new single: “I think I did a good enough job of trying to sum up exactly how my girl makes me feel. We’ve had some pretty hedonistic times together and it’s basically about that and the love between us in those moments! I’m so happy with the production and what all the lad’s brought to it too. We really think this track showcases another side to us without losing that Utopiates’ party vibe we like to lean towards.” 

The band have a real groovy tone, and have set a real precedent for feel good, snappy lyrics and infectious beats, they’ve got a real different sound to a lot of other bands at the moment. My favourite track from the debut album “Ups and Downs” features 90s esque piano, and building tempo, with electronic mixing and tight drumbeats. Their signature fast-paced rhythms made for a perfect summer debut album, and we can look forward to how they branch out in 2024, following the release of this new single to really top off a huge year for the band. 

Recording locally at The Nave in Leeds, they also played at Belgrave Music Hall on 2nd December. Now, after a sold-out summer tour, they’re back in the studio for their second album after being signed to V2 last year. They may have only formed in 2021, but they’ve had very promising statements of “band to watch” by promotors, such as This Feeling, who have a historically excellent track record of finding the best up and coming bands.  

Lucy Rose Returns Asking “Could You Help Me?”

Written by Millie Cain
Edited by Eve Moat

We’ve missed her sultry tones and punch-in-the-heart lyrics, so nearly five years after her last album No Words Left, Lucy Rose releasing the new single ‘Could You Help Me’ this October had her fans in a frenzy.

Fast-paced, jazz-influenced piano sets the tone for the song from the get-go: she’s affected, dreamy yet exasperated. This beginning of jazz-pop piano drifts into a more ethereal sequence, which is punctuated by careering, electric guitar solos. With a full band behind her, she confidently controls the song with such alluring ease, almost like spinning the tale through her sound. With the addition of spattering drums, echoing vocals, and hints of electronic production – it gives a chaotic beat which can only be reflective of her own vaguely scattered mind, as she swings between her punchy lyrics, and finds a cathartic end in crooning, almost lullaby-like notes.

Channelling frustrations from parenthood, she discusses the intense back pain that came from it which made living her day-to-day life almost impossible. She even remarked recently: “I sought medical help but was dismissed repeatedly.” But, never one to be swayed, Lucy Rose explained in her press release how she’s listening to different influences, the likes of “Erroll Garner, Duke Ellington, Kiefer, Debussy, Little Simz, and finding myself drawn so much more to writing at a piano.”

After previously singing and working on records by Bombay Bicycle Club, Manic Street Preachers,
and Paul Weller, she’s got real poise and experience that brings a true masterfulness to her works. This single was co-produced and composed by artist Kwes, who has produced for the likes of Loyle Carner, Solange Knowles & Damon Albarn. Especially after launching her own independent label – Real Kind Records – in 2020, I sincerely hope that a fourth album of hers is to come, as this is “the beginning of a new chapter” as she transcends into further maturity and parenthood.

Lucy Rose will be playing an intimate one-off sold out at Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club in London on 6th
January 2024. Her new single (and previous albums and singles) are available on all streaming platforms!

The Last Shadow Puppets: To Three or Not to Three? 

Written by Millie Cain
Edited by Eve Moat

All anybody in indie music ever seems to want is more Arctic Monkeys. More, more, more, leeching the essence right out of Alex Turner. More AM, more Humbug, more Suck It and See, even gagging for more Tranquility Base Hotel and Casino. More shows, more tours, more music, more demos. New bands are chasing their sound, recreating their looks, singing their covers. O2 Academy’s Indie Thursday must play more AM in one night than sell overpriced vodka-lemonades. To top it all off, we eat it up every week. We want to swallow them whole. Finally though, Matt Helders recently announced, after their recent (slog of a) tour that “Arctic Monkeys need a break”.  

But how, you may ask, are these rockstars taking a break? How does Alex Turner walk off a stage in front of thousands to sit in his mum’s living room? To live and breathe in a way that appears to transcend normal life, and suddenly give it all up?

There aren’t any days off. When minds are whirring and your whole career is built on writing and singing material that you’ve thought up, how do you turn off? For the rest of the band, it’s back to America; Helders to his new wife, kids, and their home, but for Turner, is he leaping right back into the loving arms of Miles Kane?  

2007: indie sleaze is in full swing, Miles Kane’s band The Rascals are supporting Arctic Monkeys’ tour, and something is blossoming. A whispering of ideas, bonding over David Bowie and Scott Walker, a shared love for that 60s and 70s inspired orchestrated sound that Turner just can’t escape. The Last Shadow Puppets formed and released their first album The Age of the Understatement in April 2008. Double the songwriters, half the work right? The baroque-pop album released to critical acclaim, a debut number one, and earned a mercury prize nomination. The co-frontmen went on a world tour as TLSP, in a move described as “ambitious, intimate, and profound”. It held a real difference in songwriting, an old school romance flowing throughout, and leaning into an older, pre-psychedelic sound.  

An 8-year hiatus followed, Turner was busy releasing three more Arctic Monkeys albums (Humbug, Suck It and See, and AM) as well as delving into creating a movie soundtrack with Submarine. Kane also released two huge albums, and front-manned another supergroup, Jaded Hearts Club, with more of a rock turned northern soul sound, made up with Graham Coxon (Blur), Nic Cester (Jet), Matt Bellamy (Muse), and Sean Payne (The Zutons). Everybody wondered whether they’d ever be back. Nevertheless, Everything You’ve Come to Expect hit with a bang in December 2016, as another number 1 album, with a smooth, sophisticated Californian flair. 

With a second album came the question: where is the third? In an interview with NME in 2016, Turner revealed “We always wanted it to be a trilogy […] We wanted to write the second and third parts before we released the second”. A third album, written somewhere, perhaps stashed in the secret box of their minds, deep in the LA countryside. Kane, as recently as this year, admitted to Radio X “We always talk about it mate […]  before this lifetime is done, a trilogy will definitely be put in place”.  

With the buzz surrounding Kane joining Arctic Monkeys on stage in Dublin for ‘505’ (a song which he originally collaborated on), him recently playing huge fan favourite TLSP songs ‘Aviation’ and ‘Standing Next to Me’ on his most recent tour, it doesn’t seem like TLSP have been forgotten. Still with 1.8 million monthly listeners, it would be a huge moment for Miles Kane as he’s powering through his solo career, and for Turner, a welcome rest bite from the nearly 50 million eyes on Arctic Monkeys. While their music has undoubtably strayed, there’s huge hints of them moving in similar directions: Kane’s single ‘My Death’ from his new album One Man Band and ‘Tears are Falling’ from its predecessor could in theory be found easily on The Car. Kane is definitely exploring new sounds and experimenting more. Could we expect a more 80s synth influenced album, or a punkier push from Kane’s side for their grand finale? And the fanbase, well now its nearing the 8-year anniversary of Everything You’ve Come to Expect in 2024, they are only going to be screaming more, more, more.  

LIVE REVIEW: JAWS are Biting Back into Business at Brudenell

Written by Millie Cain
Edited by Eve Moat

As we arrived at the crown jewel of Hyde Park’s independent music scene, Brudenell Social Club already had a swarming crowd of individuals in dark wash jackets with cans of £2 beer in hand awaiting JAWS’ arrival. The social club on Monday night was a warm haven against the treacherous October downpour, yet people still crowded outside clutching half-damp cigarettes with the distinctive smell of blue razz lemonade floating in the air. As soon as my flat mate (and occasional musical prodigy) Jack and I ran into the building, there was an immediate homely feel, calls across the room, and familiar nods of heads, made even more lovely by the eclectic soundtrack and cheap bar.  

There was a real fizz of excitement in the air, it didn’t feel like a Monday – the bar spun with the ambiance of a well-awaited Friday night, as students and locals alike bopped their heads along to Leeds’ own post-modern grunge band “Slow Team” who had the mighty job of supporting, and packed a punch as the alternative three piece burned out their souls to their home crowd and JAWS fans who were lapping up their seemingly endless energy.  

It was not long before arms were raised and clapping along to their new single “Match Point” which eclipsed the whole room, a bit more post-punk sound than the rest of their setlist- they’ve recently been leaning more into the sleek ethereal shoegaze indie that has weaved its way in over the last few years and has been done so fluidly by this band. Lead vocalist, Lucy, had ensnaring charisma, and her fellow bandmates Morgan and Max bounced off each other as their looping sounds pressed up against each other and filled the venue, cracking jokes throughout. There’s exciting potential with their recent change of tempo for huge growth, and they’re in the right place for people who will undoubtedly eat it up. 

JAWS’ arrival onto stage was met with louder cheers than could’ve been expected from the venue: a familiar hum of excitement, a sparking buzz filled the air as they launched straight into their arguably most popular single, “Stay In”, with a well-oiled groove, and especially cool elegance from bassist Leon Smith catching the whole room. The popularity of the song had a huge immediate impact on the crowd, with heads bobbing, and arms high, as the band slowed down for the instrumental builder of the song that gives it a real textured, layered quality from the Birmingham 4 piece.  

Image Credit: @musicthroughemiescamera on Instagram

The second song of their set, “Top of My Skull” from their new EP If It Wasn’t For My Friends, Things Could Be Different, released in September, had a huge increase in tempo and the disjointed bridges injected a new lease of energy into the space. This new single is really taking a step away from the synth-heavy shoegaze indie that initially shot them to fame in 2012. Drummer Eddy Geach appeared almost as a sci-fi hero, nearly drowning under the crazy amount of cymbals, but which he appeared to navigate with incomprehensible ease.  

Noticably, the green lights flooding Brude added to the almost nonchalant, casual air of the band, while sounding so technically tight, as if it was a live recording. It was evident how polished and practiced every member was before embarking on this tour- especially it being their first one since 2021.

Image Credit: @musicthroughemiescamera on Instagram

New song “Are My Friends Alright?” brought back the synth, pop sound, and was well received by their cult-like crowd. JAWS’ fanbase has certainly been strong for the last few years, following them up and down the country on each and every new tour. In the recorded version, it has a faint autotune (almost Casablancas-esque) mumbling sound to it, that was mastered live by lead singer Connor Schofield.  

Their stage chatter however, was few and far between, with brief thank yous, an introduction and an actually quite funny anecdote about their previous Brudenell show, in which someone had crashed the stage to brush their teeth, was the extent of the conversation between the band and their audience. While they held a very well-respected and professional presence in the room, I couldn’t help but wish to hear a bit more from the band themselves.  

Before I knew it, they were closing with fan favourites “Be Slowly” and “Gold”, and the audience were electric from the first light riff of their final song, chanting along and polishing off an exciting show that was wrapped up in talent and drowning in potential.

JAWS have toured new EP If It Wasn’t For My Friends, Things Could Be Different, which was released on 15th September, whipping around Northern-heavy venues in Newcastle, Glasgow, Manchester, with a home show in Birmingham, and a couple of Southern trips to Bristol and London. With how clean and polished they’re sounding, and the punchy new EP, there’s no doubt we’ll be hearing more from them soon, hopefully with some festival shows in the coming year.

Their new EP is available on all streaming platforms, and the band can be found @jawsjawsjaws on their respective social media platforms.

Setlist: 

Stay In  

Top of my Skull  

Driving at Night   

Are My Friends Alright?  

What We Haven't Got Yet  

Right Infront Of Me  

17  

Just A Boy 

Sweat 

Donut 

Be Slowly 

Gold