LISTEN: GIHE on Soho Radio with Jessica Winter (24.07.25)

Tash and Kate were back in the Soho Radio studio bringing listeners their usual eclectic mix of new music tunes from some of their favourite female, non-binary and LGBTQIA+ artists. Mari offered the team some of her “musical musings” too!

They were joined by London-based pop darling Jessica Winter, who spoke about her debut full length release, My First Album, her upcoming UK tour dates in October (including a London headline show at The Lower Third in Soho on 28th October) and the inspirations behind all of her wonderful alt-pop creations. She also spoke candidly about the hard earned patience and resilience she’s developed during the process of creating an album that feels true to her authentic self.

Towards the end of the show, the team shared a special track by genre-fluid non-binary artist Naafi, who contributed to The Sound Of Trans Freedom audio project, produced by Aunt Nell aka our very own Tash Walker!

The piece follows the journey of four trans sound-artists into the archive of Press for Change, a formative lobbying group that brought about the Gender Recognition Act. Tash asked the sound artists to use their imaginations to bring to life letters from trans people who wrote to Press for Change in the 90s and early 00s. journey of four trans sound artists into the archive of Press for Change, a formative lobbying group that brought about the Gender Recognition Act. Tash asked the sound artists to use their imaginations to bring to life letters from trans people who wrote to Press for Change in the 90s and early 00s.

As Tash explains: “The piece looks back into our trans histories whilst holding space for what we are fighting for when it comes to trans rights today, a world that should hold space for trans people to not just survive but thrive.”

Listen back below:

 

We’ll be back on Soho Radio on Thursday 21st August from 4-6pm (BST)
 Make sure you tune in via DAB or the new Soho Radio app!
You can also listen at www.sohoradiolondon.com

Tracklist
Beverley Glenn-Copeland – La Vita
Baby Rose – That’s All
Elaine Mai ft. Faye O’Rourke – Aim
Tiiva – you and i
**The Great Escape Festival Interview Clip – Maria Uzor**
TTSSFU – Call U Back
Aether Speaker – That’s For The Nosebleed
LOBSTERBOMB – Nightbird
Sprints – Descartes
Jessica Winter – Big Star
**Interview with Jessica Winter**
Joy Crookes – Perfect Crime
simplesong – 1-800 GIRLS
Elkka – Make Me
JPL, A Girl Named Sue, Billy Otto, Tora – I Am (Tash’s Track Of The Show)
Blue Loop – The Knife (Kate’s Track Of The Show)
Problem Patterns – I’m Fine and I’m Doing Great (Mari’s Track Of The Show)
Starling – I Can Be Convinced
Moonchild Sanelly – Falling
Automatic – Is It Now?
UPCHUCK – Forgotten Token
Snowapple Collective – My Body
Mr. Beale – Gilded
Rubie – Death By Catgirl
Ruby Doomsday – Blood and Thunder
Naafi’s Contribution to The Sound Of Trans Freedom project by Aunt Nell
Planningtorock – Transome

LISTEN: GIHE on Soho Radio with The Dead Zoo (26.06.25)

Tash, Kate and Mari were live in the Soho Radio studio once again, bringing listeners an eclectic mix of new music tunes from some of their favourite female, non-binary and LGBTQIA+ artists.

They reflected on their time at The Great Escape Festival curating their GIHE showcase on The Beach Soundwaves Stage (featuring Scrounge, Comic Sans, Rubie, Maria Uzor and afromerm), and The Dead Zoo vocalist Kaoru joined the team in the studio to talk about the post-punk band’s upcoming debut album, Suspects, which is set for release on 25th July.

Kaoru also shared her own experiences of being a trans woman and how this has inspired the music that she writes with her band and she shared her anticipations for The Dead Zoo’s upcoming headline gig with GIHE at New River Studios on Friday 4th July – tickets are on DICE now!

Listen back to the show below:

 

We’ll be back on Soho Radio on Thursday 24th July from 4-6pm (GMT)
 Make sure you tune in via DAB or listen at www.sohoradiolondon.com

Tracklist
GOSSIP – Standing In The Way Of Control
ANOHNI – It Must Change
HAAi, Jon Hopkins, Obi Franky, ILÁ, Trans Voices – Satellite
Saya Gray – ..Thus Is Why (I Don’t Spring 4 Love)
**The Great Escape audio highlights reel & interview clip with afromerm**
Whitelands – Heat Of The Summer
Maria Somerville – Spring
Ailsa Tully – Self Soothing
Jacob Alon – Fairy In A Bottle
Smerz – You Got Time and I Got Money
Nastazia Bazil – Call Me Habibi
Jasmine 4.t – Elephant
The Dead Zoo – Bruise
**Interview with Kaoru from The Dead Zoo**
iri – harunone
Cole Pulice – In A Hidden Nook Between Worlds III (Tash’s Track Of The Show)
Lōwli – Ground Above You (Kate’s Track Of The Show)
CATBEAR – Who Cares (Mari’s Track Of The Show)
Junk Whale – Grief Song
Strange New Places – Lonely Today
Craven – The Humpback Whale
The New Eves – Cow Song
Errunhrd – Don’t Drink Chemicals
Twin Rains – Magic Mountain
Midwife – Signs
Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Maps
Jackie Shane – Any Other Way

ALBUM: Scrounge – ‘Almost Like You Could’

Since our promoter Mari booked South London duo Scrounge for a Get In Her Ears gig at The Windmill in Brixton back in 2018, we’ve been avid fans of their vital art-punk anthems. Formed of lead vocalist & guitarist Lucy Alexander and drummer & vocalist Luke Cartledge, the pair have been bringing their formidable live sound to stages across the UK for years, as well as taking them across the pond to the USA to perform at SXSW in Texas and The New Colossus Festival in New York.

It’s at the latter that Scrounge caught the attention of label Ba Da Bing! Records, who have worked alongside the pair to release their first full length record, Almost Like You Could. Following on from Scrounge’s debut mini-album, Sugar, Daddy – which featured on our Albums of 2022 list – the title hints at the prospect of existing beyond the chaos and despondency of the current social and political climate. All it takes is a commitment to friendship, community and the guts to live authentically; something that Scrounge have dedicated themselves to on and off stage.

Sugar, Daddy was a succinct blend of cutting lyrics, intense riffs and fraught percussion that truly hit a nerve, but on their first full length offering Scrounge have upped the anti and delivered a collection of anthems that are just as hard-hitting and relatable, whilst simultaneously managing to explore new sonic territory in the process. Take closing track ‘Nothing Personal’ for example. Luke takes the lead vocals on this stripped back offering, which tackles themes of urban isolation. It’s a vulnerable and fitting end to a record that doesn’t hold back in any sense. The pair shared in an interview with The Line Of Best Fit that they incorporated samples and recordings they’d captured throughout the album’s recording process into this track, proving that their desire to push the boundaries of what they’re capable of as a two piece is as steadfast as ever.

Single ‘UTG’ is another stellar example of Scrounge’s blend of tenacity and vulnerability. Lucy penned the track to express how as a queer person, she feels that the process of “coming out” never truly ends. She pairs her earnest lyricism with a more buoyant guitar sound here, making it one of the band’s softest tracks to date, but it still retains the visceral emotional potency of Scrounge’s sonically heavier offerings. The duo balance these conflicting elements effortlessly throughout the record, which gives Almost Like You Could its impressive cohesive quality.

The album has been fuelled by the kind of proactive, cathartic cynicism that motivates you to resist and revolt, instead of sending you into a hopeless spiral. The pair acknowledge that even though things might be dire, there will always be moments of joy, pleasure and hope if you look hard enough for them. This is directly addressed on the ricocheting beats and riffs on opener ‘Higher’ as well as the melodic ‘Buzz/Cut’. Even the track ‘Dreaming’ – where Lucy repeats the melancholic line “dreaming isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be” – there is still a strong sense of finding faith in reality, however that might present itself.

‘Waste’ and ‘Rat’ are two of the record’s grittier offerings and both simmer with unrest. Lucy’s distorted riffs and Luke’s urgent percussion are totally gripping on both. ‘Corner Cutting Boredom’ and ‘Melt’ bookend each other beautifully – referencing each others titles – and again, they flow with that distinctive pressing momentum that we have come to admire in all of Scrounge’s music.

Almost Like You Could is a powerful, biting reminder that Scrounge remain driven by the desire to create meaningful art that represents who they are, as well as the voices of the allies and DIY communities that they’re a vital part of; which is something that we back all the way at GIHE. Please, please buy this album. All of the team endorse it.

Buy a ticket for Scrounge’s London headline show on Weds 23rd April at The Lexington here

Scrounge are also headlining our GIHE stage at The Great Escape in Brighton on Sat 17th May!
Day & Weekend tickets available here

Follow Scrounge on bandcampSpotifyFacebook, Instagram and X

Photo Credit: Joseph Elliott

Kate Crudgington
kate_getinherears

FIVE FAVOURITES: Vyva Melinkolya

By tethering gauzy reverb and delicate vocals together with her intimate lyrics, American slowcore/shoegaze artist Angel Diaz aka Vyva Melinkolya sculpts emotive soundscapes that explore the awe and sublime terror of the human condition. Her second solo album, Unbecoming (2022), and her collaborative EP Orbweaving – which she co-wrote with multi-instrumentalist and audio engineer Madeline Johnston aka Midwifeboth pacify the pain of the past, traversing shadowy territory in both a physical and emotional sense.

This weekend (17th-20th April), Vyva Melinkolya will be performing two sets at Roadburn Festival in Tilburg. Her shows are set to be a highlight of the weekend and we urge you to see her if you are lucky enough to have a ticket for the festival!

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 Angel to ask about her “Five Favourites” – and she picked five albums by an eclectic range of artists who have inspired her songwriting techniques. Check out her choices below…

 

1. Grouper – AIA:Dreamloss
There is no single musician as important or influential to me as Grouper. I’ve spent nearly a decade of my life listening to her everyday, especially before sleep. Dreamloss found me in late 2018 during the start an extremely dark period in my life. Earlier in the year, when things were less dire, I was obsessing over the other “half” of the double album – AIA: Alien Observer. Alien Observer, in every sense of the word, is dreamy. It has an effervescent quality to it, it can feel like a collection of “tape-saturated” lullabies. As my life began to change however, and I became more and more honest with myself about the things happening to me and around me, Dreamloss was somewhat of a reality check.

When Brian Eno described the genesis of ambient music, he talked of wanting to create sounds that didn’t impose themselves in a space, that could exist as a backdrop. My experience with Dreamloss, especially those first few lessons, couldn’t have been more different. The album opener ‘Dragging the Streets’ starts with the line “can you hear the sounds they make at night” which, still terrifies me. Speaking of lyrics, the words to ‘Soul Eraser’ are almost all intelligible. I have this fantasy of sorts that if I’m somehow able to figure out what she’s singing, I will disappear. Orbweaving (especially the title track) would not exist without this album.

2. Low – Curtain Hits The Cast
If Grouper is the most important solo musician to me, Low is the most important band . First of all, the title is extremely ominous, even kind of “Doomy”. I consider the first four tracks of this album to be one of the strongest side-As in alternative music. ‘The Plan’ is maybe my favorite “Mimi” song, her voice is at its warmest and has a sort of “wisdom” to it, even if the lyrics are mostly questions. Her voice always feels “motherly” to me. This album has just as many “loving” moments as it does “dark”. Two songs later, ‘Mom Says’ (one of my favorite “Alan” songs) is eerie in a way that’s hard to describe. It ends with the line “mom says, we ruined her body”, jeez.

Side B is incredible as well, with ‘Do You Know How To Waltz’ feeling like both an ascent and a descent into the cosmos or the ocean. The album ends with a song called ‘Dark’ which is essentially a children’s song about “how to not be afraid of the dark” – that one makes me tear up the most I think. I was listening to this album a lot in summer 2020, I have a very specific memory of putting it on during a drive to Bloomington, Indiana. Now I can’t do any sort of drive over 3 hours without it. Especially when it’s warm out. Low sounds best in the midwest and pairs best with the sounds of crickets and trucks going by.

3. Nicole Dollanganger – Natural Born Losers
Another album I fell in love with in summer 2020. I had listened before, but that’s when it fully “hit” me. I was spending a lot of time outside, especially at the skate park until the very early hours of the morning. It couldn’t have sound-tracked that time better. If you haven’t heard this album yet and want to (you should) wait till late May or June (it’s to be enjoyed every season though). This album is sensual, it’s yearning, it’s violent, it sinks its claws into you from start to finish. The final chorus of ‘Mean’ makes me feel like I’m being dragged across pavement, while ‘You’re So Cool’ feels absolute soaring and it’s one of the most “devotional” love songs ever.

I’ve truly learned so much from this record – and from Nicole’s music in general – about song writing. Especially how to set a scene and keep that scene in people’s minds. Production wise, the album has my favorite examples of “ebow” (device that vibrates the guitar string using a magnets) use. A lot of times when people record with it (myself included) it sounds harsh and awkward, but it just floats over this album like a cirrus cloud. Track for track, never have “pop” caliber vocals and post-rock instrumentals had a more beautiful marriage.

4. Giles Corey – Giles Corey
I think the term “concept album” is used inappropriately at times, so I shy away from using it. But if you held a gun to my head and asked me my favorite concept album, I would say Giles Corey. First of all, one of my favorite things about the record is the companion book, which I have annotated and dog-eared excessively. I would love to do something like that with a Vyva Melinkolya album one day. I’m a fan of big sounds, and as a musician I sort of default to maximalism. Giles Corey is an absolutely massive album with absolutely titanic sounds. ‘The Haunting Presence’ and ‘Buried Above Ground’ are perfect examples of this, heavily layered but with all sounds 100% essential. The album is also a thorough depiction of depression that feels universal without ever feeling “cliched”. There will definitely be some Giles Corey worship on the next Vyva Melinkokya album.

5. Lisa Germano – In the Maybe World
Though as a listener I have a preference for bigger sounds, Lisa Germano does an incredible job of making superficially “smaller” songs hit like a ton of bricks. If Natural Born Losers is a perfect summer album, In the Maybe World is the perfect winter album, and not just because the cover art is a winter scene. I got into this album in late 2022. I had spent a couple years before that enjoying her earlier albums like Geek The Girl and Slide which are more lively and gritty in comparison to her later work. In the Maybe World is sort of mutable in the respect that, if you’re listening for the textures it reads like an ambient album (I fall asleep to it sometimes), while if you’re giving it your full attention, it’s a body of work that’s deeply confessional and heart wrenching.

Lisa Germano has an honesty to her song writing that’s a lot to reckon with at times, but validating as well. When she says “go to hell, fuck you” on ‘Red Thread’ (a beautiful, almost medieval sounding guitar ballad) I feel so vindicated every time. It’s a perfect album for breakups and troubles of the heart and when I found it back in 2022, it was relatable to a painful degree. To me, it’s also an album about isolation and a fear of the world outside — which I currently relate to, painfully. As a musician, both as a lyricist and a multi-instrumentalist (violin, piano, guitar, accordion, mandolin, other things I’m sure) I look up to her a lot and I feel like she deserves a lot more credit and exposure for decades of amazing albums.

Thanks to Angel for sharing her favourites with us!
Listen to her album Unbecoming here

Follow Vyva Melinkolya on bandcampSpotifyInstagram & Facebook

Photo Credit: Hayden Anhedonia

Kate Crudgington
kate_getinherears