Photography by Justin Bellucci

Ioan Hazell

Journalist, musician, and poet with a passion for storytelling in all its myriad forms. 

Interested in the stories, people, and art at the fringes. If it’s weird, count me in. 

Pom Poko bring their latest album ‘Champion’ to The Garage, London with support from Alien Chicks

Norwayโ€™s Pom Poko are a band whose sound has deepened with time. Their debut album, โ€˜Birthdayโ€™ (2019), was a rush of energy and oddities from which sprung 2021โ€™s โ€˜Cheaterโ€™, an album that gave rise to some of their most beloved and catchy tracks, such as โ€˜Like a Ladyโ€™ and โ€˜Danger Babyโ€™. Their most recent release, โ€˜Championโ€™ (2024), proved in places to be a softening of their sound, showing a more tender side to the band. It is an album that balances moments of sweetness with a disarming, almost blunt sincerity.

On March 8, 2025, Pom Poko brought โ€˜Championโ€™ to The Garage, London, as the second UK date of a much-anticipated EU tour. The venue, a former billiard hall once frequented by local villainsโ€”members of the infamous Highbury Mobโ€”holds a certain kind of faded grandeur. In this odd, historically charged space, Alien Chicks, a South London three-piece, opened the evening.

Alien Chicks felt like a strange fit for The Garage. Their performance tore through the venueโ€™s classic, near anachronistic interior. From the outset, the groupโ€™s restless energy and unyielding on-stage movement seemed performative constituents of a band aiming to impress. Indeed, they succeeded in being impossible to ignore.

Alien Chicks appear to revel in disorder, offering a heady blend of jagged rhythms and maniacal vocals. Their 2024 single, โ€˜Steve Buscemiโ€™, was a standout, a track that harkened to Fugaziโ€™s punk intensity but with more erratic rhythmic shifts. For those seeking chaos (and possibly a particularly sinister rendition of โ€˜A Teddy Bearโ€™s Picnicโ€™) Alien Chicks will headline at Oslo, Hackney, on the 7th May.

When Pom Poko took the stage, opening with โ€˜Growing Storyโ€™ from โ€˜Championโ€™, their impact was immediate. Having seen the band at various venues, I was struck by how much more brutal their sound felt at The Garage. They were louder and toppier than I have ever known them to be. Rather than a flaw, this sonic boldness served only to illuminate the bandโ€™s remarkable precision, their ability to deliver staggering complexity without losing control.

Throughout the set, Pom Poko performed tracks from all three of their albums, and the crowdโ€™s devotion was palpable. The sing-alongs were as loud for 2018โ€™s โ€˜My Bloodโ€™ as they were for the title track of their most recent release, โ€˜Championโ€™. In โ€˜Championโ€™, Ragnhild Fangel Jamtveit, the bandโ€™s singer, effortlessly navigated a song of sweet vulnerability, drawing the room together. Her voiceโ€”gentle yet powerfulโ€”was complemented by clean, enveloping guitar tones that lent the song a feeling of quiet embrace.

Pom Poko communicate with one another on stage, exchanging smiles and glances: outward indicators of their freedom from the overdone trappings of rock ego. Itโ€™s refreshing to see a group making such musically adventurous, boundary-pushing work without the self-destructive air that so often lingers over more experimentalโ€”and perhaps namely, distortedโ€”music.

One of the nightโ€™s highlights came with โ€˜Follow the Lightsโ€™ from โ€˜Birthdayโ€™. The song showcased the bandโ€™s remarkable musical command. Ola Djupvik, their drummer, is a study in cool efficiencyโ€”technically extraordinary but nevertheless, dutifully restrained, embodying the bandโ€™s ethos of controlled power.

For the encore: โ€˜Big Lifeโ€™ from โ€˜Championโ€™, a track that is altogether darker and more brooding than the rest of their set. Never ones to linger too long in predictability, the pervading doom of the verses was soon interrupted by bursts of excitable optimism: โ€œThis day is a big one for me,โ€ sang Jamtveit, grinning and flailing infectiously. As the band picked up the pace, the heavy sub-bass and pulsing strobe lights hammering away at the senses of the audience, that line became a tangible, shared intuition.

Pom Poko are a band intent on giving their audience a good time. Beneath the noise and the chaos, there is an undeniable warmth, a sense of goodwill that canโ€™t be ignored. Musically, they balance the raw brutality of The Jesus and Mary Chain with the precision of Mingus, all the while maintaining a childlike, contagious joy in their performance. It is an asset that makes their noise feel less like aggression and more like an invitation to their raucous, freewheeling party.ย 

Listen to ‘Champion’ here:



Discover more from Clunk Magazine

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Let us know what you think!