pepsi - the new single by ettie

Released 28th Aug 2020 For fans of Paramore, Pale Waves, Avril Lavigne, Kim Wilde

ettie is an up and coming singer-songwriter from London, who drinks a lot of wine and has a lot of feelings. 

She infuses alternative pop melodies with personal, witty lyrical storytelling. Her enigmatic new single, ‘pepsi’, was self-written. It was recorded with Charles Westropp (Saint Raymond, Gabrielle Aplin etc) and is woven with vibrant synths.

As an up-and-coming queer artist, one of ettie’s goals is also to work with, and elevate as many queer voices as possible. Writing mainly genderless lyrics, she is also striving for exclusivity within her narratives.

All credits to Gossima Productions Copyright ettie

ettie has played some impressive landmark venues – and supported incredible artists like Calvin Rodgers. Her one-off, sound coupled with her background in English Literature, allows for an immersive sonic experience, using word play and allusion to bring her songs to life.

The first single ‘fast cars and airplanes’ went on to get radio play on BBC Scotland, and win great blog acclaim.

ettie, Category: Artist, Singles: Pepsi, hello, i've got anxiety, softboi, fast cars and airplanes, Top Tracks: fast cars and airplanes, Pepsi, hello, i've got anxiety, softboi, Biography: ettie is an up and coming singer-songwriter from London, who drinks a lot of wine has a lot of feelings., Monthly Listeners: 213, Where People Listen: London, Buffalo, Frankfurt am Main, New York City, Sacramento

Her second single ‘softboi’ showcased the sharp, witty side to her songwriting. 

With her third single, ‘hello, I’ve got anxiety’, ettie stripped back her highly personal sound, to write a song that provided people with a soundtrack to their mental health during the trying times of lockdown.

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Now, she is back with a smashing new single, ‘pepsi.’ Taking influence from 80s synth pop, ettie tells a story we can all relate to, but not necessarily for the best reasons. It’s about not having a dazzling connection with someone, but deciding to go with it anyway; like when you ask for a Coke in a restaurant and they ask if pepsi is okay? It’s not exactly what you ordered but it’s a start.

… and ettie is off to a great start.

Words: Kelly Munro

FRIDAY I'M IN LOVE 21.08

End of the Trail’s Kelly Munro’s back with this week’s top picks.

The Wilderness – ‘If I have To Die’

Video: Chris Mills Audio: Terry Benn Music Official website: www.thewildernessband.com Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thewilderness BUY/STREA...

Hugo Hamlet – ‘No One Can Stop Me

Check out the Official Music Video for my new single No One Can Stop Me! Tune in on Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, iTunes and Amazon ► https://friesboombarrie...

The Shop Window – ‘Evacuate’

Evacuate is the 3rd single from The Shop Window. To be released on 14th August 2020. The track is taken from their forthcoming album 'The State Of Being Huma...

The Mandevilles – ‘You Feel Like Nothing’

Provided to YouTube by DistroKid You Feel Like Nothing · The Mandevilles You Feel Like Nothing ℗ Lucy's Hangover Released on: 2020-07-31 Auto-generated by Yo...

Civic Green – ‘There Is Always A Light’

⚡️ BRAND NEW MUSIC ⚡️ The official lyric video from our debut single "There Is Always A Light". You can stream the song via Spotify here: https://open.spotif...

Blvck Hippie – ‘Bunkbed’

video design by Natalie Hawkins single engineered by Crockett Hall single mixed and mastered by Matt Qualls STREAMING everywhere

Nick Wagen – ‘Ladybug’

Stream "Ladybug" on any platform! Link: https://ampl.ink/4xlNo Social Media: https://www.instagram.com/nickwagen/ https://twitter.com/nickwagen Lyrics: i see...

PASSIONS TOPPLE STATUES, EVEN IN EXILE

ChooseDay warble;

What a week. Young power (again) shaking evil establishment’s elite empire with resistance to cynical downgrading. Also, youth’s ongoing philanthropy – see Stormzy, Marcus Rashford, John Boyega and other possible stop-and-search-if-not-famous folks.

Music is Nature’s communication from the original tweets – bird song – to the breeze in the trees and the sigh of the seas. Humans sing and dance. Life pulses.

Communicating: ‘Even In Exile’ album by James Dean Bradfield with Patrick Jones, has exemplary musicality blessed with a statue-topple of lyrics. By that, I mean that many more people know of Chilean Folk Hero (in every literal sense) Victor Jara in the same way that the national history syllabus got a boost about slave owning tory MP, Coulston from #BlackLivesMatter

“…Love of justice as the instrument that provides equilibrium for human dignity…” (Victor Jara)

Stream/Download 'The Boy From The Plantation' and pre-order 'Even In Exile' here. https://orcd.co/eveninexile The Boy From The Plantation - Lyrics I knew whe...

Word Wizard, Patrick Jones, is no stranger in our story. He is the original reason TheZineUK’s little doc of grassroots rock n roll movement exists. I met the intergalactic teen, Dizzy Spell (now our Editor) at a show he played for Rockands (now Events Department) in Central London. Poetry fans can see the world in parallel dimensions of space and time – like drugless drugging.

Later, as we became friends, Dizzy and I found out we were Manics fans, too. It’s a THING that weaves seamlessly through some of our crew and our tales.

Sincere good soul, James Dean Bradfield had came out in support of Patrick at that show and was in the audience at The 229. Was that really a decade ago? (It’s also where TheZineUK’s short lived gigging adventures began this year.

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If somebody asked “where do you see yourself in ten years time?”, then, we’d have got the answers wrong. So let’s keep trying to put things right. Aural uplifts help. ‘La Partida‘ could soundtrack the protests for a fairer and kinder world that never seems to end, but never fails to inspire. Hope is un-dimmed with music as an energy source.

Postcard from inspirational Street Preacher Mary O’Meara

Postcard from inspirational Street Preacher
Mary O’Meara

Crapitalism’s fascist coup-as-comic-horror is a farce that rich arseholes (farce-holes?) have waged against the many, for too long. It doesn’t occur to propaganda pushers that most humans are basically still humane. How would they nurture their newborns, tend their gardens, hug their pets or treasure their friends, otherwise? Lovers gonna LOVE.

‘Allegedly’ – The Movie.

The Plot: Once Upon Another Time, ameriKKKa revealed ShitlerTrump’s gestapo to prove that no(non-rich) lives matter. People even disappeared from the streets. “Protect And Serve Ourselves” said Lawless “Law”. “News” never questioning who the real baddies and savages of history and present are. In RoyalNonce Brexitannia, Eugenics is the order of the day 

World misleaders were over-promoted and unfit for purpose. A grave new world siphoned the poor’s money into wealth’s repulsive, ingreeding pockets. Alien hearted NaziToffs coined #HumanCapitalStock with dystopian contempt (and their usual impunity) as churnalism sucked flaccid, future-exterminating fascist cock. 

Add a Climate Emergency and a Pandemic for a twist plus vapid celebrity as the weapon of mass distraction by the divide and conquer team. 

That would be some story, eh?

Even then, poetic souls would continue being born. 

Beautiful hearts, paying it forward, enthralled by the art of the heavens, cat/dog/horse lovers united. Laughter. Children of all ages excited by music, the moon…

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They’d meet around family and friend engagement or at exhibition/entertainment events while their industrious imaginations informally rebuilt new worlds with words then actions.

They’d have secret pop stars that belong on bigger stages. Back story concepts with very much to say, having formed, endured and developed in the heist’s decayed decade. 

In 2014, sofa critics would declare that “guitar bands are over”. By 2016, hate crime increases five-fold. Despite all that, a Love (r)Evolution broke out in the interdependent arts, rising, virtually invisibly.

One year after Brexit…

One year after Brexit…

Planet Lockdown’s rock opera narrative has inciteful insight as the small venues already being culled before pandemica’s tragedy, are in danger of never opening again. We will make new ways to share joy.

We learn new/unlearn old things consistently. Manic Street Preachers are a University Of Life course, knowledge-wise.

Via the people and activism that their songs magnetise – alongside a band name, being street preachers as a way of life.

Diversity in the DNA of our “Generation Tremorists” proves there are no borders from the sky.

New video for No Borders From The Sky from the forthcoming album Renegade Psalms by Patrick Jones/John Robb released on Louder Than War Records September 13t...

Aargh, now I miss gigs.

Do I regret all those years spent on punky safari adventures? No way. 

Will I grow up? What the fuck for in a world like THIS. What’s the point? I wanna be Grace Jones meets Keef when I keel over (hopefully after the last song, ha ha) somewhere.

People used to ask whether Soul, Funk or Reggae was the music I liked. I truthfully replied “yes”.

But…I am so much more than my skin.

A decolonised punk, a Love Pirate (thank you Mr Nice), sailing the high seas of a happily low life with high standards. In escapist entertainment, especially! 

Come and mutiny, friends, we are NOT all in the same boat!

Music just isn’t life for people who believe that it can’t mix with politics. 

For anybody who can trust my ears, I feel that this is one of the most heart warming, statue toppling years for poem souled, guitar blessed British/Irish album releases, EVER.

Words: Caffy St. Luce.

TIGER MIMIC: ‘WHERE THE FIRE USED TO BE’

Written/performed by Tiger Mimic
new single is out now, produced and mastered by Kevin Vanbergen – released via 31% Wool

All Band Shots by by Robert Alleyne.

A grand, surf-rocked entrance which then saunters across to a plaintive pop rhythm that The Shangri-Las would appreciate (before diving into dramatic storms). Tender to tearing tempos that never lose this ode’s heroic core. This is cinema as sonic vision and an alternative adventure in song. Play it loud.

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It’s constantly uplifting to see appreciation bloom for the interdependent music world’s entwined scenes. Tiger Mimic, help fuel creative passion’s Uniqulture. The UK based quartet emit rays of intrigue which have gathered pace and reputation in less than two years.

Tiger Mimic formed when Jess R (vocals/keys) and Bram Johnson (guitar/vocals) arrived from New York and united with Ben Willis (bass/backing vocals) and George Latham (drums).

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They immediately started recording the debut EP ‘Elephant Skeleton’ with Grammy Award winning producer, Matt Lawrence (Adele, Foals, Amy Winehouse, White Stripes). It makes sense for their wealth of music ideas.

Released in January 2019, it wowed audiences, reporters and promoters alike. 

Alongside picking up favourable fans and feedback, they graced the new festivals where “It’s All Happening!” – including Cro Cro Land, The Brighton Mix-Up and The Camden Crush (Camden Rocks Fringe) – plus key music social events.

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I’d previously described their aural theatre as Moulin Rouge Punk. It’s only their start but already sounds influential. 

So what’s new with Tiger Mimic?

“We were very busy making the music video which we finished the day before single release and we’ve been writing so much music lately.”

More anticipations! New video, new songs!

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The story behind ‘Where The Fire Used To Be’ maybe explains it’s plaintive movements.

“The song is about loss and hope, the bittersweet gratitude of having had something worth losing. The title refers to a dormant volcano that Jess and Bram once hiked, at the top there was a misty lake that had replaced all of the heat and energy one expects from a volcano. It felt like a fitting image to describe the loss of a parent, a place devoid of the life that once filled it, yet still so sad and beautiful, literally the place where the fire used to be.”  

It’s hard to mimic Tiger Mimic‘s tangents of melody with mood swing musicality bursting into rock noise joys. A clash of “the surf-tinged riffs of The Pixies and the soaring cinematic vocals of Anna Calvi,” in the mix, ensures they stand alone. Tiger Mimic are fiercely bold, pulling off dynamics that some bands might save while they develop. But if you’ve got it now, flaunt it now. They have. They do. So their giggingcalendar for this year was also looking lively. No spoilers, but; “2020”.

“For a while during lockdown things got quite hard, but it’s all getting a bit better lately, so we’ve been feeling inspired again. We are really looking forward to gigging again and going to gigs, nothing compares to that.

We miss all our music family and friends from the scene. Sending everyone love.”

Recently they signed to the incredible 31% Wool. An inclusive creative consultancy combining art, music, branding, design, marketing and management with events that become a consistent talking point. Many ArtBeat faves of TheZineUK in this collective. Jess R is also a poet hearted #StageStyle vision of the new rock’n’roll and she radiates grace and suss. More about that, soon, no doubt. 

In the mean time, Tiger Mimic have recorded new material, including this single, with the previously mentioned producer Kevin Vanbergen (who has also worked with The Slits, Nova Twins, Nick Cave, Depeche Mode and Kid Kapichi). The plan is for these to be released throughout 2020.

Their spring single (“springle?”) release, ‘It Was Still Dark’, was played by John Kennedy on Radio X airplay alongside radio shows on Amazing and Boogaloo in UK and Scallywag Beats, USA) and many more. It is the interdependent artwork sibling of this latest release. With so much more up their sleeves, and more radio for the new single already, Tiger Mimic are off to a strong start with ‘Where The Fire Used To Be’.

Hear here!

Listen to Where The Fire Used To Be on Spotify. Tiger Mimic · Song · 2020.

Words: Caffy St Luce.