LIVE: SPIDER – Camden Assembly, London (20.03.24)

The last time we saw alt-pop polymath SPIDER play live, she was dominating the stage at The Green Door Store in 2023 at The Great Escape Festival in Brighton. Playfully taunting the “industry guys at the back” to move forward and dance along to her high energy anthems, the Irish songwriter and producer impressed us with her defiant attitude and eclectic mix of genre-blending songs. Fast forward ten months to her first London headline show at Camden Assembly and the effect is very much the same.

Celebrating the release of her new EP, an object of desire, SPIDER performed a set of riotous, angst-ridden tunes about coming of age in an antagonistic world that often tries to dictate this deeply personal process. Joined on stage by her drummer and guitarist, she launched into the title track from her new record, which instigated an impassioned response from those at the front of the crowd. Wearing a t-shirt adorned with the slogan “Who TF is Spider?” the Irish musician was quick to compliment her audience on how “hot” they all looked, before diving into tenacious renditions of ‘Straight Out The Oven’ and ‘Daisy Chains’.

From its inception, SPIDER’s set was a joyful, animated medley of pop punk and alt-pop noise with the occasional slower tempo tune – like the smouldering ‘Romeo’, lifted from her debut EP, C.O.A (Coming Of Age). Between songs, her natural quick wit and charisma shone through. She encouraged members of the crowd to shout out the names of exes treated them badly and took puerile delight in hearing them chant the lyrics to ‘Fuck You Fuck Everything’ from her second EP, HELL OR HIGH WATER, back at her.

SPIDER’s humour is underscored by a more urgent purpose though. Despite their vivacious delivery, her songs are underscored by themes of alienation and inequality. On tracks like ‘TRAUMA’ and ‘5678’, which she dubbed as a new “fan favourite”, she took an extended amount of time to contextualize why she creates her music. ‘TRAUMA’ was inspired by the entitled behaviour of a white boy who refused to pay for his shots when she was working behind a bar, whilst ‘5678’ focuses on the gendered double standards and the unacknowledged emotional labour of girls and women. Her reflections on the emotional resilience that’s required to endure and heal from these experiences is driven home by her direct lyrics, strong vocal performance and clear intonation.

SPIDER openly explained that as both a young woman and a young woman of colour, she routinely grapples with the contradictory ways in which her behaviour on and off-stage is analysed and interpreted by others. ‘5678’ is SPIDER’s way of navigating this chaos, rejecting false perceptions, and moving forward with the strength of her fans, who cheered along as she acknowledged these damaging and unfair projections.

The Irish musician is a passionate advocate for instigating change in a predominantly white, male music industry. This is reflected in her crowd – formed of majority female and gender-non-confirming fans who dance and sing without inhibition – and in her choice of support acts. She shared the bill with fellow emerging alternative artists of colour SAFESP8CE and BUKKY. This outlook is also epitomised during her corrosive closing track, ‘America’s Next Top Model’, which was penned as a response to the backlash and whitewashing she has experienced online. During the performance, she joined her crowd as they playfully pushed each other in the mosh pit, openly enjoying her moment in the spotlight at her first London headline.

Whilst SPIDER’s live set is ultimately a space for fans to cut loose and forget about the outside world, it also serves as a reminder that if we want artists like her to thrive, we need to start showing up for them; whether that’s physically at gigs, buying their music, or simply spreading the word about them online.

Follow SPIDER on SpotifyInstagramTwitter & Facebook

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

EP: Nova Twins – ‘Mood Swings’

Whatever mood you find yourself in, we guarantee Nova Twins‘ new EP is going to swing it around. The duo have followed up their self-titled debut with a knockout set of new tracks on Mood Swings, and the duo are sounding as loud and as lethal as ever.

Driven by devious and distorted bass lines, Nova Twins – aka Amy & Georgia – have an unrivaled instinct for writing anarchic anthems. Eponymous opening track ‘Mood Swings’ is a warped reflection of swift emotional shifts that will be buzzing around your brain long after it’s stopped playing. It leads in to the upbeat ‘Strange Towns’ with a chorus so catchy you’ll be singing it out loud as you parade around the streets.

Things take a heavier turn on ‘Losing Sleep’, a defiant three minutes of menacing bass lines, fiery vocals and wicked little guitar riffs. The aptly named ‘Elephant’ closes the EP with more of Nova Twins’ ferocious, uncompromising rhythms and it’s a stomper of a track that will bring the house down when the pair headline Camden Assembly at the end of November (tickets are still available here).

Wherever you are – stop what you’re doing, put Nova Twins on and let the sound of Mood Swings grind you down to dust.

Mood Swings is available to download now. Follow Nova Twins on Facebook for more updates.

Photo Credit: Mona Cordes

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

INTERVIEW: Baby In Vain

Mari & I have shamelessly plugged our love of Copenhagen trio Baby In Vain via Get In Her Ears since 2016 when we saw them perform a free show at tiny Dalston venue Birthdays. There’s something about their heavy, corrosive sounds that keeps us both hypnotised, and we were more than happy to be swept back under their spell at Camden Assembly on Monday night.

We met Bene, Andrea & Lola backstage before their show to talk about their current UK tour, their favourite tracks on debut album More Nothing, and how tricky it is to shoot a music video on skateboards and mopeds when you’re hungover…

Hello girls, am I right when in saying you met and started playing music together whilst still at school?

Bene: Not entirely…

My bad! How did you initially meet? What was it that made you want to start a band together?

Andrea: Lola & Bene went to music school together and we had some mutual friends and we went to a lot of the same shows, so we just started talking and one night decided we should all jam together, and we’ve been doing that ever since.

Bene: Every Tuesday, always on a Tuesday.

Cool. You’re almost half way through your current UK tour. What have been the highlights so far? How do the UK crowds differ from your hometown crowds?

A: Glasgow and Edinburgh…

B: So, Scotland?.

Lola: Edinburgh has been the best so far, and tonight maybe?

A: We had two days off in Nottingham also, and went to see Ulrika Spacek and Gary Numan.

I love Gary Numan! I saw him live for the first time last year and I thought he was incredible.

A: That was definitely a highlight for us. When it comes to crowds it’s not really fair to compare because in Denmark we play larger venues, and people know who we are. When we play here we’re still very new to people. Most places have been alright, but we’ve played a couple of places where only a couple of people showed up. But for an unknown band, the crowds in the UK are a little bit better.

L: I think it’s the same. Remember when we played in Oxford? People bought all of our merchandise afterwards so they really enjoyed it, but while we were playing people were just stood completely still (laughs)

B: Scotland crowds though…

L: They were incredible.

Is there any particular reason why they were so good?

L: They were so drunk!

A: Actually, when we played here about three years ago with The Wytches in Hull, the crowd was insane. Even for the support bands. They were also drunk.

There’s a trend here, the drunker they are, the better the crowd. Cool.

You released your debut album More Nothing (through Partisan Records) earlier this year. It’s a follow-up to your 2016 EP For The Kids. Did you approach the album differently in terms of writing/recording/producing compared to the EP?

B: Very differently. You can’t really compare the two recordings at all. For The Kids was meant to be an album when we started recording it, but our label thought it would work well as an EP. We were in the studio for a very long time, a very long time (laughs), several years I think? But the album was recorded in two weeks.

AWhen you don’t have a time limit you just don’t get stuff done. Once we had a deadline, things worked much better.

Do you have a favourite track on the album, and if so; why?

L: I think ‘One Feather’ is one of my favourite songs. I just think when we wrote it, you know, it was like… next level (laughs)

A: I really love ‘Transcendent’ as well.

I really like ‘Thank You’, just in case you were wondering…

B: That’s definitely a London thing! Something about Brits and that song…

It’s because the song name is really polite, but it sounds really aggressive. That’s the British way…

Your video for opening track ‘To Heaven & Back’ was shot in one take and looks extremely cool. Can you tell us about the shoot? Was miming on skateboards as easy as you made it look?

A: It was a very fun day. Me & Lola used to skate when we were younger, so it wasn’t that big of a challenge, but it was still a little nerve-racking because Bene was driving really fast, even if it doesn’t look like that in the video.

B: It was my first time riding a moped as well, I had to learn on the day.

This video sounds like a death trap.

A: It was really painful actually, the next day my thighs and my feet were killing me (laughs)

L: We shot the whole thing around 7 times. We didn’t really have a plan, we just met up and started shooting. There were no safety procedures, and we were all really hungover (laughs).

A: It was an old idea we had years ago, that Bene would be on the bike, we’d be skating, and we’d also have those little propeller caps on our heads.

L: Why didn’t have those in the video?!

I guess you’ll just have to do it again, re-shoot the whole thing.

You’ve also released a video for your latest single ‘Low Life’. I read your interview with Line Of Best Fit in which you describe this track as being “hard to complete” because you had several recordings of the song, so it took around 3 years to find a version you were happy with. Have you felt like this about other tracks?

L: ‘Low Life’ is definitely the song that we’ve worked on the longest, so we haven’t had that long a process with other tracks.

A: If you heard the old, old version of the song, it’s completely different to what it is now. We had to grow in to the song, we had to be better musicians and songwriters to write it properly. Half of the songs on the album were written pretty fast though, so we just worked really hard, kept playing at home…

L: ‘Thank You’ and ‘Pills’ were changed a lot for this recording. They’re still the same songs, but we just changed the song structures a bit.

As a blog centred around women in new music, we would love to know what female bands or what new music you’ve been listening too. What can you recommend?

B: Taylor Swift (laughs)

She’s great!

L: She’s not kidding (laughs)

Neither am I!

L: If we’re going with female bands, I love Mazzy Star.

A: Definitely, we love her.

L: She’s one of our favourite singers, and also a very beautiful woman. I’d also recommend Pure X, they’re a band we’ve been listening to a lot. They’re not girls, and they’re not new music (laughs) but they’re unknown to a lot of people and I want to spread the word about them!

They’ll be new to someone! We’ll have to have a listen.

Finally, what’s next for Baby In Vain? More recording? Touring? A holiday?

A: Holidays don’t exist (laughs), but more writing, recording, touring…

B: the same things we always do (laughs)

L: I’m really looking forward to writing songs again. You can’t really do it on the road.

A: We haven’t written a new song in over a year actually…

L: Woah, that’s insane. We need to focus man. That’s the best part of being in a band, writing songs…

…and we can’t wait to hear them. Huge thanks to Bene, Andrea & Lola for talking to us before their show. Follow Baby In Vain on Facebook for updates on future gigs and releases.

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

LIVE: Baby In Vain – Camden Assembly, London 09.10.17

Copenhagen trio Baby In Vain brought their dueling guitars, corrosive vocals and manic percussion to Camden Assembly on Monday night, and they took us ‘To Heaven and Back’. We’ve been following Andrea, Lola, & Benedicte since they released their EP For The Kids in 2016, and we’re hooked on their achingly cool sounds.

After the polished performance of support act Do Nothing, the girls took to the stage and kicked things off with ‘To Heaven and Back’, the lead single from their debut album More Nothing, which was released on Partisan Records earlier this year. Fans of the record were spoiled for choice when it came to the set list, which featured the swirling goodness of their latest single ‘Low Life’, a mesmerizing rendition of ‘Transcendent’, the melodic ‘Last Of The Turner Girls’ and the abrasive glory of ‘Not For You’.

Baby In Vain’s performance style is as captivating and eclectic as the tracks they’ve produced, and our only criticism is that they didn’t play the mind-melting ‘Martha’s View’, the lead single from For The Kids. The jagged synths on ‘The Urge’ and the visceral glory of ‘Jesusfreaks’ live however, acted as fair compensation for this oversight. Their current UK tour ends on October 21st in Oxford, so don’t miss out on your chance to see one of the coolest live bands around. Grab your tickets here.

Follow Baby In Vain on Facebook for more updates.

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut