Hot ‘n’ Fresh: The UKs hottest rising talent, live at Fox and Firkin.
Curser:
Herbie Jones (vocals/guitar), Alex Lambert (bass) & Bleu Wright (drums) formed CURSER in 2019. Second guitarist Peter Schünemann joined in January 2023.
Wielding dynamic guitars, visceral vocals and a thumping rhythm section, their musical onslaught is intense and pure – soaked with blood, sweat and other bodily fluids.� CURSER have a distinctly individual flair with their songwriting, drawing on influences from ‘90s alternative and a plethora of inspirations that develop their colourful palette.
Herbie Jones (vocals/guitar), Alex Lambert (bass) & Bleu Wright (drums) formed CURSER in 2019. Second guitarist Peter Schünemann joined in January 2023.
Wielding dynamic guitars, visceral vocals and a thumping rhythm section, their musical onslaught is intense and pure – soaked with blood, sweat and other bodily fluids.� CURSER have a distinctly individual flair with their songwriting, drawing on influences from ‘90s alternative and a plethora of inspirations that develop their colourful palette.
Kickboy:
KickBoy are the chaotic “milk-punk” 5-piece from South London. In layman’s terms though, they’d describe themselves as goofy, post-punk, brewed with influences of The B-52’s, Parquet Courts and The Garden. They coined the term after being labelled as an egg-punk band (an apparent sub-genre of post-punk) and decided they deserved their
own sub-sub-genre dedicated to their brand of self-described “goblin energy”.
KickBoy are the chaotic “milk-punk” 5-piece from South London. In layman’s terms though, they’d describe themselves as goofy, post-punk, brewed with influences of The B-52’s, Parquet Courts and The Garden. They coined the term after being labelled as an egg-punk band (an apparent sub-genre of post-punk) and decided they deserved their
own sub-sub-genre dedicated to their brand of self-described “goblin energy”.
BIG TASTY WIP:
Queer-punk at it’s very best, Leftovers bring a bit of goofy madness to a scene that really needs it.
Queer-punk at it’s very best, Leftovers bring a bit of goofy madness to a scene that really needs it.