Bella Platt

Full time student and live music enthusiast, actively involved in Manchester and Newcastleโ€™s music scene, interviewing and reviewing grassroots bands and larger indie acts.

We caught up with North-West indie rock band Kiwi about their roots, new single and the benefits of coming up somewhere other than London

In a scene full of hype and hollow trends, Kiwi keep it real. I spoke with frontman Tom Taylor about their journey from Kendal DIY demos to sold-out grassroots gigs, and how new single ‘Three Words’ shows just how far theyโ€™ve come.


So- Kiwi. How did it start? Howโ€™s it evolved? Whatโ€™s brought you here?

We originally formed with just me and Scott in Kendal (Lake District)- mint cake territory. We found some difficulty expanding our music in such a small town, but we gave it a good go anyway. After an ill-fated couple of shifts at Next with Tom (bassist), we discovered we all liked similar music. Two sessions in the studio and it just worked. From demos in a DIY studio to working with producers- weโ€™ve really tried to maintain creative control throughout our journey so far.

Talking about producers- how has the creative process evolved for the band?

Weโ€™ve recently started working with Gareth Nutall, whoโ€™s done some work with The Kโ€™s, and recorded a soon-to-be-released track with him. He had that next level knowledge, homing in on unique sounds and maintaining our input as he helped us build a track.

But itโ€™s performing live that gives us our buzz- thereโ€™s no better feeling than hearing people sing back our songs in some of the best grass-root venues. Our first EP โ€˜Codeineโ€™ often features on our set list, and despite the long process from writing to release we never get tired of playing it.

We recently accompanied M60 on tour for a couple of dates, a great opportunity that reestablished what weโ€™re aiming for as a band. Playing new venues, playing to 40-50 people whoโ€™ve never heard of us or our music, that could leave as new fans will never stop being exciting.

Your new single โ€˜Three Wordsโ€™ has a much more intimate feel compared to your other tracks.

We all receive art differently; it makes us feel a diverse range of emotions through how we perceive it. I try to carry this into Kiwiโ€™s music- a certain ambiguity. My โ€˜Three Wordsโ€™ was based on the different needs someone in a relationship might have, whether that is space or some time apart, and learning to have respect for that despite your feelings. It can be difficult to navigate. Itโ€™s not just romantic relationships, but friendships as well.

Going onto a deeper level, I have ADHD, which means I have loads of feelings and I struggle to put them out in the world and help people understand. I think our songs have that common theme; itโ€™s a great outlet.

Whatโ€™s in store for Kiwi for the rest of 2025?

Weโ€™ve recorded a new single and hopefully keep touring wherever we can- we just want to gig, gig, gig! A standout venue weโ€™d love to play again is Bootleg Social in Blackpool, weโ€™ve supported Royston Club there, so it has lots of great memories for us as a band.

Youโ€™ve focused touring mainly around the North/Northwest- what would you say to people who say you must go to London to make it as a musician?

I think if you named the most successful bands of the past 20 years, most of them started outside of London. Now thatโ€™s not me against London- a lot of industries, not just artistic ones, have the most opportunity there. But saturation wise, youโ€™re one of 10,000 bands in London trying to make it. Having pride in where youโ€™re from all the way throughout your career is important to me, if we make it as a band then we want to do it being ourselves. Loving the small town Iโ€™m from and the people that have supported us from the very start will always be a priority.

Listen to ‘3 Words’ here:



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