Berries

Berries – Spiral

London trio Berries completed their fine run in 2022 with their new single ‘Spiral’. It was taken from their debut album ‘How We Function’ via Xtra Mile Recordings.

Berries have hit all the right notes this year for grunge and riot grrl fans. On ‘Spiral’ though, they play with the formula to remarkable effect teasing listeners with angelic vocals and bursts of pop melody before the jagged force of their grunge is thrown down.

Lyrically, they explore the fashion trials and tribulations society endures in order to fit in. Such is their coolness of the vocal delivery, the opening lines “jeans don’t have holes / hair is longer than shoulders” could be forgiven for taken as literal advice. It is, however, the destruction and melody combining that give this track it’s edge. Hopeful of rejecting the norms but honest enough to admit its nigh on impossible will speak to teenage hearts and minds instantly but, inevitably will lend itself to older souls still trying to fit in.

*image courtesy of Sonic PR

Berries will be on tour with Skinny Lister in the new year here:

March

27 - Nottingham, Bodega

28 - Leeds, Santiago Bar

29 - Manchester, Gullivers

30 - Bristol, Mr Wolfs

31 - London, Oslo

Berries – Wall of Noise

London trio returned earlier this month with their new single ‘Wall of Noise’. Recorded and mixed by Antony Smith at Big Smith Studio it was released on the iconic Xtra Mile Recordings label.

Image and artwork courtesy of Sonic PR

‘Wall of Noise’ bravely tackles mental health issues. It poignantly portrays the nagging voices and the exhaustive cerebral fog this brings about:

“The wall of noise / Threatens to leak all the things we don't see / Distorted voice /Blink and it's gone but for now it lives on.”

Rather than just serving up platitudes to raise awareness, they have taken aim at us all who do so:

“Conversations inflate / Spread it on sure / But don't leave it here / As it may interfere / Because we wait / Patient irate / Unsociably perfectly placed”

Their pain and fury are set to a gloriously destructive set of Bugeye basslines and Cribs-esque licks and the righteousness of Liines. It continually threatens to explode, the perfect soundtrack to those who are suffering. When it does erupt, the solo takes on the angst of Sleater Kinney, the power of The Breeders with Yeah Yeah Yeah’s “fuck you” attitude.

Their debut album is expected for release this summer. Here are their live dates: