ALBUM: pink suits – ‘Dystopian Hellscape’

Whatever the follow-up to 2021’s Political Child would end up being, it had exponentially growing shoes to fill. pink suits‘ debut album cemented the Margate duo as a politically-charged riot, and whatever came next had an increasingly turbulent global environment to engage with. Thankfully, Dystopian Hellscape is an astute and comprehensive reaction to existing in the mess that is Tory Britain in 2024.

The album, which consists of a whopping 16 tracks, kicks off with their playful warm-up song, ‘C.O.F.F.E.E.‘ It’s a high energy, fun start to the journey you’re about to embark on through the whiplash of experiences the new album covers. 

Then they launch right into the title track, ‘Dystopian Hellscape’, which doesn’t pull a single punch when it comes to calling out the choices a handful of powerful people have made that are making life difficult for everyone else. The track uses news stories that are depressingly familiar to anyone paying attention right now to create a tapestry of struggle that builds up in a horrifying picture of contemporary life. The screaming guitars, drums and vocals generate a great cathartic release in response to hypocrisy and selfishness on the part of not only politicians, but the fractured society that allows them to thrive. The transphobes and anti-vaxxers and climate deniers who cling to the hate that has made up their identity.

Over the course of the album, the duo examines politics (‘A Comprehensive Breakdown of How Trickle-Down Economics Works’), cultural bankruptcy (‘I Don’t Have Crypto’), internal anxiety (‘Things I Told My Therapist’, ‘Kimberly May’), queerphobic micro-aggressions (‘Are You Get Yet?‘), societal hypocrisy (‘Tofu Wokerati’) and the general sense of overwhelming overload of having to exist in a world with all of those things bombarding you near constantly all at the same time (‘Don’t Talk to Me’). With each topic they engage with, pink suits know exactly how to drive home a point that leaves you unable to ignore the message they’re putting across. They have a mastery of lines that jump out and punch you in the gut, encompassing enormous and complex issues in concise summaries that get right to the point and linger with you.

But, amongst all the things that make this planet dystopian and hellish, pink suits pause for more playful tracks that remind you that it’s worth sticking around for the moments of community and queer joy you can get. There is righteous anger rich with rebellious hope (‘Refuse the Rules‘) and reminders that taking care of yourself is not only vital (‘Be Good to Yourself’), but an act of rebellion in itself (‘Self Care is Punk’), along with celebrations of the pockets of space that do exist where community can flourish and life can be fun (‘Margate Arts Club’).

This is an album that leads you by the hand to places where you can’t help but look at some of the most horrible aspects of society and see the monstrous side of humanity. But they make sure you get to stop for a breather exactly when you need it, to focus on some self-care and take a look around at all the other people rallying alongside you. Dystopian Hellscape cements the band as insightful and intelligent, as well as fun and talented performers. The riffs are fuzzy, the drums are infectious, the melodies are catchy and it’s impossible not to get swept up into the rock and rage attitude that is pink suits’ signature vibe.

Dystopian Hellscape, the second album from pink suits, is out now, listen and buy via Bandcamp. The band are currently tour and their live show is something else, so make sure you don’t miss out – tickets and info here.

Kirstie Summers
@ActuallyKurt

FIVE FAVOURITES: Holly Munro

Intricately blending electronic elements with folk-pop sensibilities, Irish songwriter Holly Munro crafts tender, deeply intuitive music. Her debut EP, Up Against Your Nature, is a gentle exploration of the power of self-love and the healing and guiding qualities of nature; themes which she explores further on her recent single ‘Dead Ends’.

“I wrote this song after finishing a meditation that involved seeing my footprints in the sand from above,'” Holly comments about the track. “It got me thinking about my life as one big journey with all these powerful detours along the way – some paths you start on but never continue, just as some parts of yourself remain unexplored. It’s about questioning the choices you make and reflecting on how they shape your future in ways you can’t always predict or control.”

We think one of the best ways to get to know an artist is by asking what music inspired them to write in the first place. We caught up with Holly to ask about her “Five Favourites” – and she picked five Irish artists who have inspired her songwriting techniques. Check out her choices below and scroll down to watch the video for Holly’s latest single ‘Dead Ends‘ at the end of this post…

 

1. Rachel Lavelle – ‘Eat Clean’
‘Eat Clean’ stands out as my favorite track from Rachel Lavelle’s debut album, Big Dreams. Witnessing her perform live is an experience like no other – her stage presence is hypnotic. She has a real talent for world-building, and I’m excited to see her artistic journey unfold.

2. Maria Somerville – ‘This Way’
Maria Somerville’s album, All My People, is one I go back to. I first listened to this when I moved back to Ireland after studying abroad, I remember being so impressed it was an Irish person haha (I was not in touch with the music scene here then). I just love the record, it really takes you somewhere else. She’s someone I really wanna see play live!

3. EFÉ – ‘Truth Truth’
This is a new find for me that came up on my TikTok for you page. All I can say is I’m in x

4. Coolgirl – ‘Gaussian Blur’
Coolgirl aka Lizzie Fitzpatrick is an amazing musician and person. I’ve had the honour of playing with her in the past. She has so many musical projects on the go. She was in Bitch Falcon, now Coolgirl, 7of9 and a new band called Dose – it’s all so good – follow her!

5. Saint Sister – ‘Irish Hour’
I loved the Saint Sister record, Where Should I End, released in 2021, it’s a beautiful listen. I’ve also had the pleasure of hearing some of Morgana’s solo music recently, and can’t wait for that to be released!

Thanks to Holly for sharing her favourites with us.

Watch the video for her latest single ‘Dead Ends’ below.

Follow Holly Munro on bandcamp, Spotify, X, Instagram, TikTok & Facebook

Photo Credit: Kate Lawlor

Five Favourites: pink suits

Having released their blazing debut, Political Child, back in 2021, Margate duo pink suits have now just released their second album. Inspired by the relentless over saturation of bleak news cycles, Dystopian Hellscape may be a little more self-reflective, silly and sexy than its predecessor, but loses none of the band’s politically aggressive, anti-Tory, anti-Fascist, Feminist Queer Energy. Inspired by a newspaper article entitled The News Comes So Often, It Makes You Sick, Dystopian Hellscape explores the effects of modern society and neoliberal politics on our mental health with pinks suits’ trademark tenacious spirit and raw musicality. Reflecting on the sense of confusion and frustration that comes with the over-saturation of scandal and disaster within mainstream media, the album also discusses themes of self-care, grief, gender identity, sexuality, queer joy and – of course – coffee. From the riotous power of searing rallying cry ‘Refuse The Rules’, and the fiercely uncompromising reclamation of being confident in who you are, ‘Are You Gay Yet?’, the album showcases pink suits’ ability to channel frustration into a perfect raging catharsis. 

We think one of the best ways to get to know a band is by asking what music inspires them. So, to celebrate the release of the Dystopian Hellscape, I caught up with Ray and Lennie to find out about the music that inspires them the most. Read about their five favourite albums, watch the video for recent single ‘C.O.F.F.E.E‘ and make sure you check out the full album on bandcamp now!

The Runaways – The Runaways
The Runaways’ debut album, which was released in 1976, is one of my fave albums of all time, as well as being a huge influence on the kind of music I (Ray) wanted to make when we started pink suits. I think I discovered The Runaways when I was about 14 and got completely obsessed with them. I think the fact that they were so young on this record, and when I found them I was also so young, it gave me a radical feeling of possibility. Which when you’re 14 feels pretty wild! I think I immediately assembled a band of misfits and people I thought could kick-off pretty well given the chance, which we were all extremely excited about and equally I think all knew it was never actually gonna happen. I loved the uninhibited energy they had, and I’m still waiting for my front-man moment – out from behind the drums! I wanna be front and centre, swinging the mic around and working the crowd.

** Sadly and disappointedly, it turns out Cherie Currie is a massive terf! But Joan Jett is still an icon, so we can breathe easy for that! Although this album and The Runaways will always be a big influence on us as a band we cannot support anyone with transphobic views. We have played ‘Cherry Bomb’ for the last time…

Amyl and The Sniffers – Big Attraction and Giddy Up
This album was one of the biggest references of sound for Dystopian Hellscape. Everyone went mad for Comfort To Me, which is a great album, but we think Big Attraction and Giddy Up is the most exciting LP. It is 2 EPs – Giddy Up was written and released all in a 12 hour time span, and then Big Attraction was written later that year. You can get the LP of both of these EPs together (though it has just disappeared from Spotify?). We love this LP, it feels so rough and ready. Amy is such a force as a front person and we love the energy they bring every time; you can feel it through the record just as much as you do live, which is definitely something we strive for as well. We find recording hard because of the challenge of getting the live feel and energy across. Not that many bands manage it, but we think Big Attraction and Giddy Up really feels like the live band.

Allison Russell – Outside Child
This debut album from Allison Russell came out in 2021, and is probably our most listened to album of all time. I think we listened to it a few times a day everyday for over a year – the best thing that we did during lockdown! It’s just incredible. It is a very personal and heart wrenching album about trauma, childhood, love, loss, growth, and her voice is just amazing. We have had the chance to see her live a couple times and wept throughout the whole show; honestly one of the most stunning humans to see. The content of the music is often quite heavy, but she is able to bring a joy and lightness to it. We love her so much!

Orville Peck – Pony
As some of you probably know, when we aren’t being a punk band we are full country babes – we run a night called Queer Cuntry, and we owe a lot of that to Orville Peck. We got immediately obsessed with him as soon as we heard this debut album of his, he really brought back a sort of old country sound which is the style of country music we love. He is also just very camp and queer and theatrical, which we relate to in a lot of ways. This album and the music videos and performances we saw from him were pretty incredible; he combines a sort of cinematic storytelling with camp aesthetics in a way that just works. There’s no fighting it! He also used to be in a punk band and trained in ballet, so really we are kindred spirits in so many ways. We saw him four times in 2019, and the live shows are so much fun. Queer Cuntry has taken off in a big way for us (we are bringing it to Chaka Khan’s Meltdown Festival in June!), and Pony was the album that gave us a kick up the ass and made us start doing country.
(You can catch pink suits in their country guise supporting Dolly Parton tribute band The Dumb Blondes on 19th July at Sebright Arms – tickets are already moving quick, so don’t miss out!)

Bob Vylan – We Live Here
This is another album that we absolutely rinsed when it came out. As soon as we heard the title track we were obsessed, and then we got the whole album and every song is fucking killer. This was such an inspiring album as we were putting together our debut album political child and were thinking about how aggressively violent and political it was; we were not worried about saying what we wanted to say, but we were curious how it would land as we were not hearing that much new music that was so full of rage. Then we heard We Live Here and we were like YES! Let’s fucking go with this angry and violent protest album! I used to go running and listen to political child straight into We Live Here to see if our album stood up next to the Bobbys… We think it does, and we got to support Bob Vylan in Ramsgate a year later, and the live show is just so so good! These guys give it absolutely everything and deserve all the success they are having.

We just realised we have a kink for debut albums! I guess that makes sense, it is so exciting to see how a new artist chooses to burst into the world. All of the subsequent material from these artists is amazing too, but clearly we love that first fresh taste. 

Massive thanks to pink suits for sharing their Five Favourites with us! Make sure you check out their full new album, Dystopian Hellscape, now. And catch them live across the country over the next few months, including at Cro Cro Land in South London this Saturday, 13th April.



INTERVIEW: Brimheim

Multi-instrumentalist Helena Heinesen Rebensdorff is finding strength in self scrutiny. On her second album, RATKING, the Danish-Faroese artist, who performs under the moniker Brimheim, finds catharsis in the contradictions of love and comfort in her own audaciously dark humour.

Released at the end of March, her latest effort is as raw as her 2022 debut offering, can’t hate myself into a different shape, but on RATKING, she vivaciously embraces remnants of shame, hyper-sensitivity and unrequited love, and sets them to a more pop-tinged, melodic backdrop.

Speaking to me on the same day that RATKING officially entered the world (mildly hungover from a panel event and performance the night before to celebrate its release), Brimheim is just as open to elaborating on her processes and reflecting on the highs and lows of creating music as she was when we initially connected two years ago.

Back then, she explained that the songs that formed her debut record were mined from a “deep depression hole” which she experienced towards the latter end of 2020. There are elements of this vulnerability and darkness on RATKING, but the starting point for creating her new album was completely different. Returning to the studio to work alongside esteemed producer, musician and friend Søren Buhl Lassen (Blaue Blume), Brimheim had no demos and no notes to spark the creative process; so the pair began improvising and experimenting with the sounds that eventually formed the tracklist for RATKING.

“I definitely think that I would not have been able to make this record with a new producer,” Brimheim comments about its inception. “It required trust to go to places that we’ve gone, both sonically, and with trying to expand the outer margins of what a Brimheim record can be.” She elaborates on how this was trust was initially built between Søren and herself: “Towards the end of creating the first record, Søren and I made this little interlude called ‘like a wedding’. It’s just this 40 second bit that we jammed in the studio. That worked so well and it was a really cool process. So, when we started making RATKING, we tried to do that for the whole album, and it was mostly a very intuitive process.”

As the pair worked more intensely on these new improvisations together, Brimheim noticed that thematic threads were beginning to appear. “I didn’t have any theme guiding me with what I wanted to do sonically, or lyrically. But after the first few weeks of working in that way, and gathering some songs that came very effortlessly to us, and how we could build on that – that’s when the process got a little more intentional and guided.”

This confidence in each other’s abilities takes many forms on RATKING. Whether it’s the fully fleshed band sound and distinctive instrumentation on tracks like ‘Dancing In The Rubble’ and ‘Keep Bleeding Diamonds’, the infectious pop melodies on singles ‘Literally Everything’, ‘Brand New Woman’ and ‘Normies’, or the sonically more expansive tracks like ‘No Liver, No Lungs’ and ‘Surgeon’, Brimheim and Søren have crafted an eclectic and exhilarating collection of lush alt-pop anthems.

When listening to RATKING, it feels as if Brimheim – as she states herself – is giving ‘Literally Everything’ to her listeners, coolly musing during the track that “It’s easier than I thought / To turn my secrets into your entertainment”. She agrees that her second offering is definitely “a more extroverted and confident record.”

Whilst the confessional lyrics on can’t hate myself into a different shape offered a raw, startling glimpse into the thoughts and struggles of an introverted and often vulnerable narrator, on RATKING, Brimheim gleefully leans into the “unreliable narrator” role. She fluctuates between intense romantic extrapolations and painful sentiments on heartbreak, isolation and neglect – often all within the same song. This is especially true of her current favourite track, ‘Fell Through The Ice’. “It has this quiet desperation,” she explains, “but it ends up spilling out like gall, and there is this humour in how ridiculously pathetic the narrator is in the song.”

We dive a little deeper into some of the album’s other tracks, particularly ‘No Liver, No Lungs’ and ‘Surgeon’, which I offer up as my favourites. “To me, they’re a little bit like the sleeper songs on the album,” she comments. “I think that they have a lot of depth and are really interesting. Those songs are the ones where we’re stripping away most of the ‘traditional rock band’ arrangement. They are mostly electronic.”

“With ‘No Liver, No Lungs’, I don’t remember much about making this song because it was so effortless. We chose to put ‘Surgeon’ after it on the tracklist, because we’d opened up the portal to that sonic world. So we could go a bit further into this world and make it a bit dark, even a little scary. When we created ‘Surgeon’, it was a long day in the studio. It is actually kind of an oppressive soundscape if you listen to it for 8 hours straight. But I think it was such a cool nuance to include. Again, to me, it is expanding the scope of the kind of music that I can make.”

Building on and expanding her artistry as Brimheim naturally extended into the accompanying visuals for RATKING. In the video for her first single ‘Literally Everything’, Brimheim is dressed luxuriously in baby pink, posturing and performing inside a dark barn amongst animals and their excrement – accurately serving the track’s title. She is toying with the duality of perception and expectation; what something looks like vs how it really feels – and how we often mask the truth from others and of course, from ourselves.

Brimheim manages to transform moments of intense discomfort into deliciously dark and humorous visual vignettes. Whether she’s enamoured with a strange, tentacle-headed monster in the accompanying video for candid earworm ‘Normies’, or force feeding herself prawn cocktail at the dining table inside an extravagant mansion in the visuals for ‘Brand New Woman’, she does so with a wry and knowing smile.

“Each of the video’s directors understood that there was a humour to this thing – it’s almost self-deprecating, but not, at the same time,” she elaborates. “It’s something that I love to play around with, and the videos underline that tone of voice in a good way. I was very happy about that.” This comes across especially strongly in the visuals for ‘Brand New Woman’, featuring fellow Danish singer/songwriter Emma Grankvist aka eee gee.

Brimheim’s brief to director Stine Emil was “housewife – but make it creepy”, so they rented a huge mansion north of Copenhagen for the shoot. “Stine really took that idea and ran with it in a super cool way,” she comments, “and I got to act a little bit at the end, which is something I’ve always wanted to try my hand at. That’s actually ended up with me being cast in a feature film that I’ll be shooting later this year too.”

Collaborating with like-minded artists, directors and producers, and the opportunities that arise from these experiences, is something that Brimheim is deeply excited and appreciative of. “It’s challenging and wonderful, and such a weird position to be in, launching your career towards your late twenties and early thirties,” she reflects. This extends to her feelings about her upcoming UK tour, which includes a headline show at The Lexington in London on 22nd May. “I’ve been dreaming about going on a tour like this since I was 12 years old,” she smiles. “I’m 34 now, and it took a long time to get here, but I am extremely excited.”

We end our conversation with a chat about an artist that she’s currently listening to. “I’m obsessed with Tony Njoku, who is just incredible,” she enthuses. “I know him privately and I’ve followed his journey throughout the past 7 years, when we met on a conservatory exchange week. He’s just released a new song, which is a neo-classical piece, but he also does really hard-hitting alternative electronic/alternative pop music. It’s just stellar. I cannot gush about him enough. He’s prolific. He releases so much music, and it’s always so different. He showed me some tracks that he’s working on and I’m like ‘okay, he is going to get very famous, very soon.’ He is just ridiculously good.”

Brimheim’s latest album RATKING is available here

Grab a ticket for her London headline show at The Lexington on 22nd May here

Follow Brimheim on bandcampSpotifyInstagram & Facebook

Photo Credit: Photo by André Hansen

Kate Crudgington
X: @kate_crudge
Insta: kate_getinherears