

Bella Platt
Full time student and live music enthusiast, actively involved in Manchester and Newcastleโs 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 theyโve come.
So- Kiwi. How did it start? Howโs it evolved? Whatโs 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- weโve really tried to maintain creative control throughout our journey so far.
Talking about producers- how has the creative process evolved for the band?
Weโve recently started working with Gareth Nutall, whoโs done some work with The Kโs, 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 itโs performing live that gives us our buzz- thereโs no better feeling than hearing people sing back our songs in some of the best grass-root venues. Our first EP โCodeineโ 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 weโre aiming for as a band. Playing new venues, playing to 40-50 people whoโve never heard of us or our music, that could leave as new fans will never stop being exciting.
Your new single โThree 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 Kiwiโs music- a certain ambiguity. My โThree 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. Itโs 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; itโs a great outlet.
Whatโs in store for Kiwi for the rest of 2025?
Weโve recorded a new single and hopefully keep touring wherever we can- we just want to gig, gig, gig! A standout venue weโd love to play again is Bootleg Social in Blackpool, weโve supported Royston Club there, so it has lots of great memories for us as a band.
Youโve 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 thatโs not me against London- a lot of industries, not just artistic ones, have the most opportunity there. But saturation wise, youโre one of 10,000 bands in London trying to make it. Having pride in where youโre 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 Iโm 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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