LISTEN: GIHE on Soho Radio with Scrounge (08.01.24)

New Year, New Music! Tash and Kate were back on Soho Radio’s airwaves for Get In Her Ears first show of 2024, playing loads of new music from some of their favourite female, non-binary and LGBTQIA+ artists. Mari offered some of her “musical musings” too. Artists featured on the eclectic playlist included Big Joanie, NewDad, Katy Kirby, Jaed, Cutty, Baby Rose, Vyva Melinkolya, Laura Misch, Roller Derby, Kllo, Liv Wynter, CHERYM, Riotmiloo…and more.

GIHE faves Lucy and Luke from South London duo Scrounge also came into the studio to chat about their recent performance at Third Man Records, the award-winning artwork on their debut album Sugar, Daddy, and their upcoming trip to New York to play New Colossus festival. They also recounted some of their highlights of 2023, including a whirlwind tour with tee-side noise punks Benefits, which involved a lot of long distance driving, and a lot of early starts.

Listen back to the show below:

 

We’ll be back on Soho Radio on Monday 5th February from 12-2pm!
 Make sure you tune in via www.sohoradiolondon.com

Tracklist
Big Joanie – New Year
chlothegod ft. Baby Rose – Bless Your Heart pt. 2
Isaac Delusion, Olivia Merilahti – All day
NewDad – Nightmares
SPRINTS – Heavy
Thermal – 18
Laura Misch – Hide to Seek
Jaed – All Abandon
Cutty – Overdrive (Garage Mix)
Shygirl, Cosha – thicc
This Mortal Coil – Song To the Siren
Erika Severyns – Ireland
Softcult – Heaven
Vyva Melinkolya – Song About Staying
Chelsea Wolfe – Tunnel Lights
Scrounge – Corner Cutting Boredom
**Interview with Scrounge**
Liv Wynter – Violence
Riotmiloo – Define Normal
Kllo – Affection
Ghost Marrow – Might Of The Small
CHERYM – It’s Not Me It’s You
Bikini Kill – Rebel Girl
Katy Kirby – Hand To Hand
Roller Derby – Always on My Mind
Chappell Roan – Pink Pony Club
Mary J. Blige – Family Affair

FIVE FAVOURITES: Dermabrasion

Creators of brooding gothic anthems that rumble with discontent, Toronto-based duo Dermabrasion are preparing to release their upcoming debut album, Pain Behaviour, on 26th January via Hand Drawn Dracula.

Formed of Adam Bernhardt and Kat McGouran, Dermabrasion bonded over a shared fascination with punk music, the occult and the corporeal form. Inspired by Roman Catholicism, LaVeyan Satanism, genre fiction and how this literature affects humanity’s outlook on power, shame and duty, Dermabrasion’s Pain Behaviour is a formidable concoction of post-punk, industrial and metal influences, culminating in a sound they’ve coined as “death rock and roll.”

We think one of the best ways to get to know a band is by asking what music inspired them to write in the first place. We caught up with Adam and Kat to ask about their “Five Favourites” – five albums that have inspired their songwriting techniques. Check out their choices below and scroll down to listen to their latest single ‘Magic Missile’ at the end of this post…

 

1. Sisters of Mercy – Floodland
Kat: Not going to pretend we are too cool to love this heater of a classic. We wanted to share albums versus songs because recording a full-length release and looking at it as a cohesive statement was a new thing for us. But some of our shared staples, like this one, showcase the form so well. From the drums and guitar striking like thunder and lightning in the first seconds of “Dominion” (always let it play all the way through) to its swampy final conclusion, Floodland weaves its tonal and atmospheric motifs throughout every track. Not a concept record, but with a distinct feeling of beginning, middle and end. Not a rock opera, just Daddy Eldritch in his most megalomaniacal era, seeing how far he can push the camp and bombast that he says is satire but probably comes from a very earnest place. Using big words and existential concepts to divine personal meaning; sax solos, runtimes that prolong undeniably solid grooves to the point of a game of chicken. The dark and indulgent excess is magnificent and I want to bathe in it.

Adam: It will never not be funny that Andrew Eldritch recorded an 11-minute diss track with a 40-piece choir and harpsichord.

2. The Mall – Zone
Adam: This album will make you want to buy a synth. I mean I did, I bought two. I think I found this album through the YouTube algorithm, which is always nice. I listened to it quite a bit over the course of lockdown and the pandemic, and I used to play it a lot when I went back to work over the intercom. They called it ‘weird spacey music.’ They also fired me. The album, though, is great. It’s an interesting mix of EBM and synth pop but hardcore. Songs like ‘Habit’ or ‘An Answer’ are absolute earworms, and they’ve got some really great mournful melodies that I eat right up. I guess it kind of evokes a liminal space in a dead mall, or maybe I’m reaching a bit, but I love it all the same. Also, if you get a chance to see them live, watching them is a real treat. They do it all without a DAW, which is crazy!

3. Special Interest – The Passion Of
Kat: The Passion Of feels like where Special Interest distills its years of experimentation and chaos and tour and, and, and, and, into its defining sound and statement as a recorded group as much as a legendary live performance act. The live chaos and urgency transmutes to an oppressive and textured noise fog, dynamic enough for listeners to pick out a different nuance each time. Alli Logout’s vocal performance just sends me. Hardcore as fuck, hitting incredible notes, each of which delivering a different shade of emotion for every word, speech, homily, manifesto, whether sung, screamed, chanted, spoken, proselytized. I could reserve all those nouns and verbs for “Street Pulse Beat” alone. The dirty, groovy drum and synth tracks, crunchy bass tones, the words, the mood, the vibe. I listened to this album a lot while sick and housebound during the pandemic and it seeped deep into my bones. A fitting soundtrack to mourn an old life, sexily, and summon forth a new one.

Special Interest came through our city a couple times between 2017-2019 and made a massive impression on us. It was the “DISCO” era and I remember their sound and performance feeling really transgressive, especially with what I understood to be the ‘rules’ for aggressive guitar music at the time. It was my first time experiencing music that felt and looked hardcore, ferocious, that took up the same space as any d-beat or powerviolence band’s live drums with electronic beats. You wanted to throw down but also watch and listen because they brought such a distinct attitude and confrontational point of view.

I had such a limited tolerance for what I would accept as “worthy” musically, going into my 20s, and am still trying to outgrow this macho bullshit about things needing to be “heavy” to be worthwhile. But to some degree this was/is a reflection of (and overcorrection against) the attitudes around me, and this band has been here providing a reference point for how to be hardcore, but be sexy about it, provocative, dancey, confrontational in a more distinct way. Just straight up different, but bringing the same feeling and energy to the sound and crowd.

4. Godflesh – Streetcleaner
Adam: I never listened to much metal growing up because all the metal guys I grew up with were bigoted assholes, and the punk v. metal divide seemed so very important back then. I forget how exactly I heard of Godflesh but a metal band with Swans, Big Black and Killing Joke influences definitely caught my interest. That they did that all without a drummer was just weird enough to sell it to me. All their albums are great, but I think Streetcleaner is probably my favorite. Man, is this album GRIM. The atmosphere is so oppressive, so bleak, so heavy. It’s the Silent Hill pain dimension with drop-tuned guitars. Justin Broadrick is able to evoke such brutal imagery with his guitar, and G.C. Green’s bass playing is so pummeling, it all serves to create this hypnotic wall of sound that oozes discomfort. Misanthropy in its purest form. Godflesh are super creative with their drum machine patterns, and I always find something new whenever I listen to them.

5. Danzig – Danzig
Kat: Unironically and unapologetically my favourite record. I love Danzig in every era, it’s hard to choose just one album. But I think what endears me to Danzig most is that he is just simply unwilling or unable to be anything other than exactly who he is, and to me this album is the clearest statement of that.

If I have the timeline right, most of these songs were written and in the process of being recorded while Samhain was still a thing. Releasing an album under his own name meant Danzig wouldn’t have to deal with lineup change issues, but he was still bitter and had something to prove. And he still had that death rock stank on him.

It just feels like there was so much riding on this release that he could have gone too far to ~realize~ his ~vision~. But then you have literally Rick Rubin telling you what to do and who to get to make it sound absolutely perfect. Cooking all of Danzig’s angst and ambition and hubris down to its most concentrated form, removing from it anything extraneous, for a thrifty 40 minutes of relentless howling into a sparse, airless void above the band’s tight and driving grooves. It shouldn’t be anything more. It is exactly enough. And he needed to yield some control so he didn’t sabotage himself.

Reading this back it all just sounds like what I really like is the narrative I’ve created in my head from the lore of this album which–there you go, that’s it really. I have a parasocial relationship with this record.

Adam: Danzig benefits from having someone who isn’t Danzig behind the dials (or film camera).

P.S. Please give us a round of applause as two insufferable and very online music forum nerds of the 2010s who neither once here used the word “angular.” Disclosing for accountability that a second use of the phrase “wall of sound” was removed in editing. (lol)

Check out Dermabrasion’s latest single ‘Magic Missile’ below

Pre-order Dermabrasion’s debut album Pain Behaviour here

Follow Dermabrasion on bandcamp, SpotifyInstagram

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

GIHE: Ones To Watch 2024

It’s fair to say that 2023 has been a tough one, but if there’s one positive to take away, it’s the immense amount of incredible new music that’s been released, and the hope of even more wonderful offerings from new bands in 2024.

Following our Tracks Of 2023, Albums and EPS of 2023 and Highlights of 2023 features, we’re now sharing our Ones To Watch for 2024 – naming a handful of bands and artists who have impressed us and that we predict will be reaching ears far and wide next year. Have a read of our choices and make sure you give them all a follow to keep track of their achievements over the next twelve months.

Dogviolet
The latest project of London DIY scene queens Naz and Ella, Dogviolet are already fast becoming a staple on any decent female/queer focused line-up in the capital. I had the honour of hosting the band’s first ever gig last summer, and since then they’ve been winning over crowds with their captivating grunge-fuelled post-punk. Returning to play for us this November at a sold out Sebright Arms to support Problem Patterns, it was wonderful to see how they’ve really honed their sound and built in confidence on stage; with their now established line-up of Brodie joining them on bass and Lauren on drums, they exude a subtle spellbinding power and gritty immersive energy, marking them out as truly unique. It’s easy to see why bands like Heartworms, The Wedding Present and folk legend Grace Petrie have been keen to share stages with them lately, and they have some exciting announcements in the pipeline for 2024. I can’t wait. Find out more about Dogviolet here.
(Mari Lane – GIHE Co-Founder)

 

ALT BLK ERA
Watching genre-defying sister duo ALT BLK ERA supporting STRAIGHT GIRL at our GIHE gig at The Shacklewell Arms earlier this year proved to me that the future is bright for alternative music. Taking cues from an eclectic range of artists – Ashnikko, Hacktivist, The Prodigy and Billie Eilish and Nova Twins to name a few – together, teenage siblings Nyrobi and Chaya  blur the boundaries of pop punk, nu-metal, rap and electronic music to form their riotous sounds. By combining jagged electronics, heavy riffs and racing beats with raging lyrics, the pair have created an alternative statement of self autonomy on their debut EP, Freak Show, which perfectly showcases their antagonistic, youthful spirit. They’ll be playing at The Hootananny in Brixton on 6th March, before heading to Download Festival next year. 2024 looks set to be a big year for them, so catch them while you can. Check out our recent interview with ALT BLK ERA here. Find out more about ALT BLK ERA here. (Kate Crudgington – GIHE Co-Founder)

 

Sheherazaad
One of my favourite new discoveries of 2023, Brooklyn based artist Sheherazaad left me completely spellbound with her debut single ‘Mashoor’ (so much so that it was one of my tracks of the year…) Reflecting on her South Asian sonic lineage, it draws on themes of displacement and nostalgia with a contemporary, genre-defying spirit, immersing you in its exquisite rippling allure on first listen. Produced by Arooj Aftab and released via renowned label Erased Tapes, this first offering from Sheherazaad showcases all there is to love about the innovative artist; a creator of intricate beauty, not afraid to share her values about what matters most. And, having already received acclaim from the likes of Pitchfork and The New York Times, I’m quite certain listeners the world over will be falling in love with her unique soundscapes throughout 2024. Find out more about Sheherazaad here.(ML)

House Of Women
2023 was a big year for Hackney-based alt-rock trio House Of Women. The band performed alongside Coach Party and Bedroom High Club at London’s Omeara at the end of the year, and they played knockout sets at All Points East and 2000 Trees festivals in the summer too. Perhaps most impressively though, they self-released their debut EP, People Printing, in November, cementing their status as a band with a compelling sound and truly exciting potential. 2024 looks set to be another big year for Elsa Malazogu (guitar), Poppy Miller (guitar) and Kyla Lanai (vocals, piano) and I’m looking forward to seeing what they do next. Check out our recent interview with House Of Women here. Find out more about House Of Women here. (KC)

CHERYM
Since first falling in love with 2021 single ‘Listening To My Head’, I’ve been following Derry band Cherym, addicted to their empowering, nostalgia-tinged punk-pop. And, having been lucky enough to catch them live both here in London and across the pond in Belfast, I’ve become convinced that their perfect blend of uplifting honey-sweet allure and gritty riotous energy is headed for big things… Another band signed to the best of labels, Alcopop! Records, they’ve had an exciting 2023 sharing stages with the likes of The Beths and GIHE faves ARXX, spendin the summer playing festivals such as Truck and Rebellion, and even ventured to Austin for SXSW. Now, with their debut full length album on the way in February, followed by a European tour (including dates supporting Enter Shikari), I have a feeling that my convictions will be proved right; 2024 is going to be a big year for the Northern Irish trio. Find out more about Cherym here. (ML)

Pixie Cut Rhythm Orchestra
Watching Pixie Cut Rhythm Orchestra’s vocalist Sarah Deegan perform traditional Celtic song ‘Amhrán na hÉascainne’ (The Song Of The Eel’) at the band’s debut London headline gig for GIHE at The Shacklewell Arms was a cell-altering experience that Mari and I will never forget. Her effortlessly urgent vocals were totally captivating, and alongside her band mates (including the ultra cool Julie from HAVVK), she treated us to a set full of deeply poetic, melancholy shoegaze sounds. I’m grateful to Irish artist Constance Keane aka Fears for introducing me to the Dublin band a few years ago. If you get the chance to see Pixie Cut Rhythm Orchestra live, please take it. Find out more about Pixie Cut Rhythm Orchestra here. (KC)

Vyva Melinkolya
Angel Diaz aka Vyva Melinkolya is responsible for some of my favourite music from the past year. She worked alongside Midwife on their collaborative EP, Orbweaving, a moving rumination on healing from, and enduring pain, plus, she released her second album, Unbecoming, which features contributions from Midwife and the inimitable Ethel Cain. Her hazy, heavy shoegaze is perfectly complemented by her magnetic, far-off vocals. Listening to her music is a dreamy, disorientating experience. I’m hoping to catch her live at some point in 2024. Find out more about Vyva Melinkolya here.


Despite our apprehensions about 2024, at least we’re heading into the new year with some fantastic music to accompany it! Massive thanks to all who’ve supported GIHE throughout 2023, it really means the world. And huge thanks to all the amazing bands and artists who’ve soundtracked it, and who will continue to soundtrack 2024!

GIHE: Tracks Of 2023

With another hard-going year behind us, we’ve continued to seek comfort in new music released by our favourite hard-working and talented artists. There’s been an immense amount of incredible new music released, so we want to shed some light on some of the tunes that got us through the hard times, accompanied the good times, and generally saw us through 2023.

To start our annual end of year round-ups, we’re sharing our ‘Tracks Of 2023’ ahead of features on our favourite albums, ‘Highlights’ and ‘Ones To Watch 2024’ Have a read about some of the tunes we’ve been loving the most, and make sure you hit play on the accompanying playlist to hear just how fantastic they all are! (In addition to listening to the playlist, if you particularly love any of the tracks, please do follow the artists on social media and, if you can, buy their music and merch via Bandcamp or their websites).

pink suits – ‘Refuse The Rules’
Margate queer punk duo pink suits have been big faves of mine for a couple of years now, and have blown us away playing live for us at Shacklewell Arms a couple of times. ‘Refuse The Rules’ is the first taster of their upcoming (and perfectly named) second album, Dystopian Hellscape, which is set for release in Spring next year. The track offers a scream for space; a refusal of the rules that have been historically created to limit people’s lives and freedoms. A short and sharp rallying cry inciting us to stand up and make our voices heard in the face of suppression and aggression. Something we need now more than ever. Also, while I’m talking about my love of pink suits, I think one of the most fun events of the year for me was attending their first London Queer Cuntry with fellow GIHE writer and door person extraordinaire Kirstie. They’ve been hosting them regularly in Margate for some time, but are now building on its success and this was hopefully the first of many more in London… It really was such a joyous night; performances ranging from acoustic country ballads, to drag and cabaret, all with an unapologetically queer energy and unifying spirit.
Find out more about pink suits here.
(Mari Lane – GIHE Co-Founder)

Jock – ‘Spoilsport’
I love this driving, potent anthem from Belfast-based queer band Jock – new GIHE favourites for sure! Orla from the band explains: “’Spoilsport’ is a punk song written in reaction to the ‘culture of silence’ surrounding sexual assault cases in Belfast” – we’re all about protest songs here at GIHE so we fully support Jock’s message. Newly signed to one of our favourite labels VETA Records, I’m looking forward to hearing more from the band in 2024.
Find out more about Jock here.
(Kate Crudgington – GIHE Co-Founder)

Scrounge – ‘Starve’
I got to see long time GIHE faves Scrounge in the tiny but intimately delightful basement of Third Man Records last month. The sound in there is fantastic, what a venue to hear Scrounge banging out their tunes – as expected Lucy and Luke were brilliant. We love them.
Find out more about Scrounge here.
(Tash Walker – GIHE Co-Founder)

Gender Chores – ‘Dysphurious’
Having shared stages with the likes of Problem Patterns, Strange New Places and Sister Ghost, Belfast punks Gender Chores create empowering anthems defending reproductive rights, resisting the patriarchy and documenting the human cost of late-stage capitalism. A reflection on coming out as non-binary – a subject that’s very close to the band’s hearts – ‘Dysphurious’ offers an energising boost of confidence to be your true self in the face of adversity. The track was recorded at Belfast’s Start Together studios with GIHE fave Rocky O’Reilly. Find out more about Gender Chores here. (ML)

Touch Excellent – ‘Couch Song’
This is a very cute tune from Dublin pop punks Touch Excellent. Full of dreamy vocals, relatable lyrics and melodic riffs, ‘Couch Song’ is a buoyant musing on introversion and attraction at house parties, and how these dueling states play out in a crowded room.
Find out more about Touch Excellent here. (KC)

Panic Pocket – ‘Get Me’
Natalie and Sophie – aka Panic Pocket – released their debut album Mad Half Hour this year via Skep Wax records, and it’s been a definite highlight. I’ve been a huge fan of these two since they first played live for us back in 2019, and just can’t get enough of their uplifting indie-pop and tongue-in-cheek wit that fizzes throughout each release. ‘Get Me’ offers a sassy take on the “claustrophobic questions about settling down”, and showcases the duo’s new-found rockier sound, with the addition of ‘back pocket’ band members Healey Becks (Fightmilk) and Laura Ankles (Colour Me Wednesday). I’m super excited that Panic Pocket will be playing for us again at our next gig at Shacklewell Arms on 2nd Dec, supporting German band Roller Derby – nab tickets on Dice now. Find out more about Panic Pocket here. (ML)

Small Crush – ‘Rumblin’ Tummy’
Having released their second album, Penelope, this year, Bay area band Small Crush have been one of my favourite new discoveries. With their own distinct brand of dreamy surf-pop, I can’t get enough of their shimmering energy and whimsical nostalgic charm. They just seem to be able to perfectly balance vulnerable a raw emotion with blissful, carefree vibes and glistening allure. Find out more about Small Crush here. (ML)

Softcult – ‘Haunt You Still’
I’m a big fan of Toronto-based sibling duo Softcult. This track is a shimmering reflection on the mark we leave on others in the extended aftermath of a breakup, whether that’s platonic or romantic. Full of their trademark shadowy, swirling riffs and soft dual vocals, they explore accountability and atonement on this bittersweet offering. Haunting in all the right ways. Find out more about Softcult here. (KC)

O Hell – ‘hard times’
The chorus to this O Hell track hit me right in sternum the first time I heard it. The solo project of Projector’s Lucy Sheehan, O Hell tenderly navigates the uncertain territory between romantic and platonic love on this track; dismissing the idea that we always need to burn bridges in the aftermath of a relationship. Over atmospheric beats, cinematic synths and idiosyncratic samples, Sheehan acknowledges that we need time to recover, but true closure comes from accepting change, and moving forward with optimism, even if that goes against the grain. Find out more about O Hell here. (KC)

Hand Habits – ‘The Bust Of Nefertiti’
LA based artist Meg Duffy – aka Hand Habits – released their EP Sugar The Bruise earlier this year; a collection of songs focused on being in the moment. The EP was written after Duffy had taught a month long songwriting class last summer, in which they discovered a newfound clarity in embracing the unknown. I just really love this track’s driving emotion and cinematic soundscape – it’s been one of my most-listened to songs of 2023 for sure.
Find out more about Hand Habits here. (ML)

girl with dream – ‘H.R.T’ (Heart Replacement Theory)
One of my favourite songs of this year, from girl with dream who I first heard almost a year ago when they reached out to me via email. Girl with dream is the project of trans singer-songwriter Chris Lawson and Rhy Climenhage. And this song is all about the sacred power found in embracing yourself and participating in the an act of healing, guided by self-love and harnessing agency. Something that we can all lean into a bit more I think, and a lovely note to take us from 2023 to 2024. Find out more about girl with dream here. (TW)

Becca Mancari (ft. Julien Baker) – ‘Over and Over’
Having collaborated with big names such as Hayley Williams (Paramore) and Julien Baker (boygenius), Nashville artist Becca Mancari released latest album, Left Hand, this year. Rippling throughout with a beautifully heartfelt emotion and twinkling musicality, it offers a dreamy and gently empowering reflection on queer identities and our relation to the natural world; a shimmering and relatable ode to being your true self. I was lucky enough to chat to Becca back in September, have a read! Find out more about about Becca Mancari here.
(ML)

Nina Keith – ‘Blow Up Yr Life (U Need To)’
A comforting reminder to let go of negativity and doubt, ‘Blow Up Yr Life (U Need To)’ is a gentle offering from LA-based trans artist, producer and composer Nina Keith. Featuring the vocals of indie pop artist Barrie and composer and musician Qur’an Shaheed, the track is a considered, delicate blend of lilting electronics, fragmented voices and crisp production, all of which melt together to create an exquisite, emotive listening experience.
Find out more about Nina Keith here. (KC)

Sheherazaad – ‘Mashoor’
One of my most-listened to songs of the year comes from New York based artist Sheherazaad with her debut single, ‘Mashoor’. Reflecting on her South Asian sonic lineage, it draws on themes of displacement and nostalgia with a contemporary, genre-defying spirit. Exuding an exquisite rippling allure, Sherherazaad’s sumptuous vocals flow throughout, allowing ‘Mashoor’ to immerse you in its soaring, spellbinding beauty on first listen. It’s just exquisite and I can’t wait to hear more from Sheherazaad in 2024.
Find out more about Sheherazaad here. (ML)

Twin Rains – ‘You’re The Only One’
This apocalyptic reflection on love from Toronto-based Twin Rains has been swirling around my skull all year. Full of intoxicating riffs and smooth vocals, it’s a potent blend of dream pop and psych rock with an electronic edge, and I can’t stop listening to it.
Find out more about Twin Rains here. (KC)

Brenda – ‘Microscopic Babe’
Glaswegian band Brenda joined us on the radio show earlier this year. I love their self-titled album, each song is like a different fairground ride, chaotic bangers! We’ve had some amazing guests joining us here in the studio at Soho Radio throughout 2023. So, remember you can always listen back to our past shows here! Find out more about Brenda here. (TW)

Girl Ray – ‘Everybody’s Saying That’
I think ‘Everybody’s Saying That’ showcases all there is to love about Girl Ray. It’s taken from this year’s album Prestige, which is inspired by the ballroom scene of the 1980s, and oozes bucketfuls of queer joy throughout. Being one of my total faves, it was a real honour to interview Girl Ray this year – they were even lovelier than expected! I also was lucky enough to catch them live (an experience that always leaves me feeling super happy and nourished) for about the fifth time a couple of weeks back at Village Underground – a night filled with blissful vibes, celebrating the new album and all the band has achieved. I continue to love everything that Poppy, Sophie and Iris do – and can’t wait to see what they do next. Find out more about Girl Ray here. (ML)

Say She She – ‘Astral Plane’
I caught Say She She in all their glory at Village Underground earlier this year and they were honestly exceptional. If you get the change to catch Say She She live, grab it with all your fingers! I had the best night bopping along in the crowd.
Find out more about Say She She here. (TW)

Bas Jan – ‘No More Swamp’
London collective, and long time faves, Bas Jan, released their new album Back To The Swamp this year, and this fellow swamp-themed track ‘No More Swamp’ perfectly showcases the band’s trademark quirky energy and perceptive songwriting ability. Reflecting on how the band’s lives have changed over the years, it interweaves shimmering instrumentation to create a wonderfully danceable cacophony. Find out more about Bas Jan here. (ML)

Sylvan Esso – ‘Echo Party’
This track by Sylvan Esso came out at the beginning of 2023. What an epic tune, the production is just sublime, and it has not stopped me dancing since I first played it on our February radio show at the beginning of the year. How good is that!! 
Find out more about Sylvan Esso here. (TW)

jellyskin – ‘Bringer of Brine’
Leeds-based electronic duo jellyskin were one of my favourite new music discoveries this year. ‘Bringer of Brine’ is taken from their debut album, In Brine, which they released via Wrong Speed Records back in June. They’ve combined throbbing beats, hypnotic vocals and industrial-techno inspired synths to create this manic and massively enjoyable anthem.
Find out more about jellyskin here. (KC)

Gabriel Gifford ft. Apthy Khéa – ‘Voice From The Wind’
I love this collaboration between Berlin-based producer Gabriel Gifford and Greek-born artist Aphty Khéa. Featured on Gifford’s concept mini-album, Hailstone King, which explores themes of grief, masculinity, mental health, identity and legacy through the story of a mythical king, ‘Voice From The Wind’ is described as an experimental anthem that tackles queerphobic attitudes. Sung in their native Greek language, Aphty Khéa’s potent voice compliments Gifford’s deconstructed club beats so well.
Find out more about Gabriel Gifford here. (KC)

Maria Uzor – ‘Ventolin’
I think it’s fair to say that Maria Uzor is one of our GIHE all time fave artists, and this has been such an amazing year for her. It’s such a joy watching an artist you support and admire receive the deserved praise and accolades they deserve. And, to round it all off with an amazing album Soft Cuts which she released this autumn, celebrating with a fantastic launch party at the Windmill in Brixton. Sublime. 10 out of 10. And this is one of my favourite tracks from the album – shout out to all my fellow ventolin users out there!
Find out more about Maria Uzor here. (TW)

Lauren Auder – ‘the ripple’
Lifted from her highly anticipated debut album, the infinite spine, ‘the ripple’ is a tenacious alt-pop gem that showcases London-based, French-born musician Lauren Auder’s distinctive artistic talent. Her album is a potent, pop-drenched exploration and celebration of her true self, and what it’s like being a trans woman in a world that increasingly tries to deny trans women the right to exist on their own terms. Described as “the monkey’s paw of having your voice heard,” ‘the ripple’ is Auder’s rallying cry “to accept, to be duped / to not grimace at the absolute”, a message that she fully delivers via racing, distorted electronics and cathartic screams that permeate the track’s chorus.
Find out more about Lauren Auder here. (KC)

Dermabrasion – ‘Halbadier’
I love this ominous cacophony of industrial-tinged post punk from Toronto-based duo Dermabrasion. Taken from their upcoming debut album, Pain Behaviour, which is set for release on 26th January 2024 via Hand Drawn Dracula, ‘Halbadier’ is a heavy, brooding gothic anthem that rumbles with discontent. Find out more about Dermabrasion here. (KC)

afromerm – ‘held’
Oram Award-winning artist and producer afromerm shared her debut single ‘held’ exclusively on bandcamp back in July. Formerly known as CIL (who we named as one of our ‘Ones To Watch‘ in 2022) under her updated moniker, afromerm is marking a “new era” of her journey into sound. ‘held’ is an eclectic rumination on the duality of emotion, flowing with afromerm’s instinctive musicality. It was a pleasure to interview her on our November Soho Radio show this year too. Listen back here. Find out more about afromerm here. (KC)

Massive thanks to all the artists and bands creating wonderful tunes this year – be sure to check them out and support their work! And keep an eye out for our Albums & EPs Of The Year, 2023 Highlights and Ones To Watch for 2024.

Listen to our Tracks Of 2023 playlist now!