n°1 | In Conversation

Jess Allanic on Dedication, Perseverance, and Calva Louise’s Latest Album
Jess Allanic is the visionary force behind Calva Louise, the boundary-pushing international trio redefining what it means to be a rock band in a render-filled digital age.

Kelli Ali on Spirituality, Sneaker Pimps, and Finding Purpose Beyond Fame
Emerging from Birmingham’s gritty streets to international acclaim, Kelli Ali has become one of music’s most quietly radical forces, conjuring everything from the dark, seductive allure of ’90s electronica to the haunting intimacy of stripped-down folk.

Gina Birch on The Raincoats, <em>Trouble</em>, and the Power of Self-Expression
Gina Birch didn’t just come up through punk — she helped write its most resistant and seminal feminist manifestos.

Ebet Roberts on Photography, CBGBs, and Following Your Heart
Ebet Roberts is the visionary photographer whose lens has immortalized the pulse of modern music, from the raw energy of punk’s first wave to the timeless icons of rock, pop, and jazz.

Diamond Rowe on Influence, Tetrarch, and Her Historic Signature Guitar
Diamond Rowe is the fearless visionary trailblazer that’s dismantling and deconstructing the boundaries of modern heavy music.

Kasha Souter Willett and Grace Rolek on Nostalgia, Authenticity, and Starling’s Latest Album
Emerging from the twilight shimmer of L.A.’s restless underground, Starling lays it to you soft and heavy.

Abigail Cowen on Self-Confidence, <em>The Ritual</em>, and Protecting Your Peace
With a slow-burning intensity and a gaze that pierces the veil between fantasy and reality, Abigail Cowen has carved out a space as one of Hollywood’s most magnetic rising stars.

Roberta Bayley on Photography, Punk, and the Greatest City in the World
In the dimly lit clubs of 1970s New York, amid the clang of guitars and the restless spirit of punk, Roberta Bayley stood quietly behind her camera, immortalizing legends before they became legends. Through her fearless eye, the punk revolution found its most iconic defining vision.

Rosie Garland on The March Violets, Survival, and Embracing Your Inner Outsider
From the smoke-drenched stages of 1980s Leeds to the quiet fury of the written page, Rosie Garland courageously makes space for the strange and the silenced.

Gitane Demone on Motherhood, Transformation, and the Legacy of Christian Death
From the haunting shadows of deathrock to the smoky allure of cabaret, Gitane Demone has carved out a musical legacy that’s as radical as it is fearless.

Azita Ghanizada on Grit, Authenticity, and Redefining Representation
Azita Ghanizada’s journey from a refugee of war-torn Afghanistan to a trailblazing force in Hollywood isn’t just a story of resilience — it’s a pioneering blueprint for transformative impact.

Sally Dige on Creating Art Without Shame, “Sow the Path,” and Being a Rebel with a Good Heart
Sally Dige’s music emerges like fragments of a dream — intimate and hazy, quietly distant but hauntingly familiar.

Brec Bassinger on Fate, <em>Final Destination</em>, and Fearlessly Taking Up Space
From suiting up as a star-spangled superhero in Stargirl to dodging death in Final Destination, Brec Bassinger isn’t afraid to take on fate — on screen or off.

Anja Huwe on Her Art, the Legacy of Xmal Deutschland, and Never Looking Back
With a haunting voice that once electrified Europe’s post-punk scene as the lead singer of Xmal Deutschland, Anja Huwe has carved an enduring legacy for the disillusioned and the defiant.

Soyoon on Se So Neon, “Twit Winter,” and Learning from the Past
As the electrifying frontwoman of Se So Neon, Soyoon is the genre-defying trailblazer that’s boldly redefining the landscape of Korean indie music.

Cherry Vanilla on Being a Punk Rock Icon, a Warhol Star, and Launching David Bowie’s Career
Blending sexual freedom, cutthroat honesty, and a voice that could electrify any crowd, Cherry Vanilla remains a trailblazing glam rock icon whose influence has reverberated far beyond the 1970s.

Ezra Furman on Confidence, Fame, and Getting What You Couldn’t Have
Whether thrashing through defiant anthems or whispering secrets by guitar in the dark, Ezra Furman’s music is a wild, beautiful collision of rebellion, vulnerability, and electric hope.

Constance Keane on Drumming, Misogyny, and M(h)aol’s Latest Album
In an industry still uneasy with outspoken women, M(h)aol’s Constance Keane isn’t dialing it down — she’s forcing a reckoning.
Shana Halligan on Vulnerability, Boundaries, and Her Bitter:Sweet Return
Dripping with smoky vocals, cinematic decadence, and a fearless fusion of genres, Shana Halligan’s music doesn’t just seduce — it enchants the senses and drags you into its alluring, dreamy underworld.

Honey Bxby on Honesty, <em>Raw Honey</em>, and Chaotic Women
In an industry built on image and a culture obsessed with curation, Honey Bxby is betting everything on authenticity — and winning.