Talking to: flipturn

The indie-rock five-piece - Dillon Basse (vocals, guitar), Tristan Duncan (lead guitar), Mitch Fountain (synth, guitar), Madeline Jarman (bass), and Devon VonBalson (drums) - have come a long way from college house shows. They’ve carved out their own path through festivals and late-night TV, and now they’re set to light up The Fleece on 13th November.

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Talking To:Guest User
Talking to: Flyte

Flyte’s music feels like stepping into a space alive with quiet energy, reflection, and purpose. In August 2025, the indie folk duo (Nick Hill and Will Taylor) released Between You and Me, an album that captures both the spontaneity of life’s small moments and the weight of its larger reckonings. Its songs move effortlessly between intimacy and exuberance, offering listeners a glimpse into the personal landscapes of its creators.

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Talking To:Guest User
Gig Review: Anna Colette @ Bristol Beacon, 25th Sept 2025

With the rise of artists like CMAT and The Last Dinner Party, there’s a real yearning in the air for complex, femme singer-songwriters, especially those that have darker and deeper influences. We’re living in an era of lore-forwards music; in the sense that, artists are working harder than ever to integrate their music into their own creative universes, via short films, stage set pieces, accompanying choreography, and more. And though it may seem like a lot of hard work, Bristol-based artist Anna Colette makes it look seamless. 

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ReviewGuest User
Gig + Album Review: Newton Faulkner - “OCTOPUS”

It’s very likely you’ve heard the name Newton Faulkner - maybe his 2007 breakout hit  ‘Dream Catch Me’ is in a playlist or two of your own - but if you haven’t been keeping up with his recent work, I am sure that it will delightfully surprise you. I had the chance to catch Faulkner playing an in-store performance at Bristol’s Rough Trade, as he travels the UK & Ireland to promote the release of his new album ‘OCTOPUS’.

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ReviewGuest User
Talking To: Lorenza Marino

Lorenza Marino describes herself as a ‘citizen of the world’ and her debut single ‘La Melodie’ epitomises that completely. Born in East London, the Italian Zambian singer-songwriter is an emerging independent artist with influences coming from all over the world. Her debut is a confident mission statement - Lorenza is here to weave together different genres and cultures in unexpected and beautiful ways. And I’m here for it! 

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Talking To:Guest User
Talking to: Rosemary Wylde

I’m always excited to explore new music and meet new artists, but when I got the opportunity to talk to Rosemary Wylde — someone who is creating her own path for her music without the use of social media — I jumped at the chance.  I recently chatted with her about her upcoming second single “Raise Up Your Banner”, her upcoming album “Peace Revue”, and about growing up on the London protest scene. 

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Talking To:Guest User
Talking to: Marlon Williams

Sitting down with Marlon Williams, at this point in his career, feels like entering the very ‘whare’ he has built with  (The Messy House), a space alive with introspection, warmth, and spirit. For the New Zealand born singer-songwriter, his fourth album marks not only a musical return to form but also a deeply personal reconnection to language, ancestry, and identity. As his tour brings this radiant body of work to audiences around the world, Marlon opens up about the power of language, and the creative journey that led him here: one shaped by solitude and community, tradition and experimentation, grief and joy.

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Talking To:Guest User
Hear Me Out: Our Votes for Artists of A Generation

Few bands have managed to capture the emotional landscape of a generation quite like Coldplay. Since their debut in the late 1990s, the British quartet has evolved from introspective indie rockers to global icons, while maintaining a sound that is deeply emotive, universally relatable, and unmistakably theirs.

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OpinionGuest User
Unfinished Symphony? The Closure of Motion Nightclub and the Future of Bristol’s Nightlife

Motion’s disappearance also carries serious historical weight. It emerged from the squat rave movement of the 1980s, where DJs squatted vacant spaces across the UK drawing tribes of people with a shared rebellious spirit. These raves existed in liminal spaces on the edges of legality and society, where a melting pot of cultures enjoyed many genres of music collectively.

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OpinionGuest User
Review: Polite Bureaux- "EXCEPT YOUR SKiNT" Album

Social narratives, elite swagger and a shameless amount of northerness, Polite Bureaux, like cigarette-filled pub garden conversations, have brought raucousness, unapologetic social commentaries and foul mouthed philosophies to the table with their recent album release, ‘EXCEPT YOUR SKiNT’.

With what feels like a future generational album of electronic berserkness, post punk riffs and charisma tinged references, the band bring together some of most complex arrangements in styles representing some of life’s simplest moments.

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ReviewGuest User
Review: Wolf Alice- "The Clearing" Album

Sometimes an album or release can perfectly speak to a moment or period of your life. ‘My Love is Cool’ soundtracked the angst of adolescence, ‘Visions of Life’ shows a more positive entry into early adulthood, ‘Blue Weekend’ gave us colour in the greys of commuting life. Our generation grew up with this relatable progression from Wolf Alice and here we are today for the 4th chapter, ‘The Clearing’.

In this release the band welcomes a new tide of 70s soft rock influence whilst maturing in class and quality. The tracks from start to finish, Ellie’s vocals and the band’s instrumental compositions are so rich in flavour. This is unapologetic proof that Wolf Alice have been and still are at the top of their game.

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ReviewGuest User
Talking to: Wilshaw

In this conversation - despite the context and an ongoing discussions on mental health, overcoming natural human emotions and dealing with adult life – it was somewhat refreshing to speak to an artist who has taken on a new beginning with pure honesty and an esteemed level of music intelligence.

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Talking To:Guest User
Making Music for Everyone: Building Inclusive and Community-Driven Music Spaces

Truly inclusive music spaces are not just about access – they're about authenticity, risk-taking, and community. In these spaces, music becomes a way to unlearn societal constraints and connect more deeply. Music is often a gate-kept world – privileging formal training, tradition and neurotypical ways of communicating. So many people feel locked out: disabled people, neurodivergent folks, those from working-class or global majority backgrounds, queer and trans artists. Inclusive music spaces disrupt this pattern by inviting everyone to create and be heard.

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OpinionGuest User
Talking to: 1-800 GIRLS

Emotions have become commonplace on dancefloors but often states of ecstasy on top of high tempo drops. This artist is on a mission to show a different side of emotions; surrealism, nostalgia and poignance. With another two tracks to add to his electronic catalogue of feelings, we had the pleasure of getting ten insights into what makes him tick.

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Talking To:Guest User
Review: Sonotto - "FORGET ALL THAT YOU LOVE" EP

Truly enigmatic through each and every step they take as an artist, an upbringing fuelled by an illustrious exploration of creativity, an example of blatant uniqueness, Sonotto, is an artist who holds this unforgiving, unrelented and unmatched energy.

They are a true performer and a warhorse of a producer, whose every release is a cliff-hanger - imagining what could this multitalented individual possibly bring out next. And this week, they pick back up where they left off with the two-track EP, FORGET ALL THAT YOU LOVE.

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ReviewGuest User
Talking to: Luna Kali

Out of all the artists I have interviewed, Luna Kali has, by far, been the richest and most enjoyable conversation. An artist who has recently released a debut EP – The Colour I Am, played in numerous jams and bands and is a really familiar face in the Bristol music scene. The remarkable thing about the Angolan-Cape Verdean artist, beyond her talents, is the vulnerability she showcases. Not just in her music, but as you’re about to find out, in conversation and through her everyday actions.

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Talking To:Guest User
Review: Shanti Celeste & Peach for Spice on SZN

When Shanti Celeste and Peach stepped up, they played a blinder of a B2B, gradually ramping up the energy until the whole room hit boiling point — literally. As the 11pm curfew neared, the theatre was sweltering, makeshift fans were working overtime, and dancers started swapping their own clothes for Spice on SZN-branded tank tops.

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ReviewGuest User
Coming Up: Shanti Celeste is going B2B with Peach in Bristol Uni Lecture Hall

Captain Morgan, yes the rum company, and Foundation FM, a finger-on-the-pulse online store, have come together to create the ultimate, and most unexpected, night out. They’re turning a Bristol Uni lecture hall into the place to be on June 19th, with UK singer-producer-superstar Shanti Celeste going B2B with the icon that is the Canadian DJ, Peach, alongside support from Foundation FM Resident, ELLAWEEEZ. That’s enough to get me out on a school night.  

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Talking To:Guest User