The Panic Years Bradley Simpson

Album info

Album-Release:
2025

HRA-Release:
28.02.2025

Label: Insanity Records

Genre: Pop

Subgenre: Pop Rock

Artist: Bradley Simpson

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Cry at the Moon 03:07
  • 2 Picasso 03:16
  • 3 Carpet Burn 03:09
  • 4 Daisies 02:22
  • 5 Holy Grail 02:54
  • 6 Getting Clear 02:31
  • 7 Not Us Anymore 03:17
  • 8 Almost 03:16
  • 9 Favourite Band 03:20
  • 10 Always Like This 02:55
  • 11 The Band's Not Breaking Up 04:18
  • 12 The Panic Years 03:18
  • Total Runtime 37:43

Info for The Panic Years



Having performed in front of millions of fans around the world and selling out headline shows, Bradley Simpson is now channelling that star power into his debut solo album, ‘The Panic Years’. Set to be released on Feb 28th 2024, the record is destined to establish him as one of the UK’s most exciting new global artists.

As we’ve heard from the singles ‘Cry At The Moon’, ‘Picasso’, ‘Daisies’ and ‘Always Like This’, the album achieves a rare blend of qualities. On ‘The Panic Years’, Bradley’s new songs take in touches of indie-rock, Americana, ‘80s synth and psychedelia but they also sparkle with pop addictiveness. Just as importantly, the songs go far deeper into his personal experiences: life, love, lust and learning - a diaristic collection of rite-of-passage moments that fans will instantly connect to.

Bradley says, “I hope these songs and stories can help them navigate those experiences. They can become the soundtrack to their lives, whether they’re dancing, crying, going out or whatever it is. It really feels like an opportunity to let them into a side of my life that I haven’t shared before.”

Despite possessing the inspiration of an artist who is just starting out, the record’s consistent accomplishment means that there’s no mistaking Bradley for a brand new artist on this record. The album’s new single ‘Holy Grail’ demonstrates his maturity, both in the songwriting and his assured vocal delivery. Sonically, it sounds timeless, a slowburner that evolves from quiet intimacy into a richer tapestry of sound. Lyrically, it celebrates the future he has with a loved one, and how he can’t wait to go through the good times and the bad, as long as it’s with them.

The song was written at Wendy House Studios in London with Ina Wroldsen (Calvin Harris) and finished in the legendary Flux Studios in New York with the two-time Grammy nominee BOOTS (Beyoncé, Run the Jewels).

Bradley adds, “‘Holy Grail’ is a song about realising that going through ups and downs with someone you love makes it worth it. I spoke about that with my friend Ina, who is an incredible songwriter, and then wrote it around an electric guitar before I recorded anything. Later, BOOTS and I tracked live drums, and I wrote the outro in the studio. It was one of the harder ones on the album to finish because it felt quite delicate and anything we added really needed to earn its place in the production.”

Authenticity is a big part of what makes ‘The Panic Years’ such an evolution of sound. The majority of its songs started in his modest home studio, and that DIY vibe didn’t really shift even as they were developed with a host of top tier collaborators. Primarily working inNew York’s Flux Studios (where The Strokes’ classic ‘Is This It’was made), Bradely would enthuse over shared influences such as Queens of the Stone Age and The Raconteurs with BOOTS, Andrew Wells (Phoebe Bridgers) and Anthony Rossomando (Liam Gallagher).

Bradley Simpson



Bradley Simpson
Having performed in front of millions of fans around the world and selling out headline shows, Bradley Simpson is now channelling that star power into his debut solo album, ‘The Panic Years’, which is destined to establish him as one of the UK’s most exciting new global artists.

Take his first single, the angst-ridden ‘Cry At The Moon’ that recalls Jeff Buckley on ‘Grace’. It opens with sparse, Americana-influenced acoustic guitar strums, before Simpson begins to sing the first verse in dark, husky tones. Then the song explodes on the chorus with a shout, the squall of electric guitars and an intense flurry of percussion. “Now I cry at the moon/ She don’t shine quite like you,” he calls out. “I’m all wrapped up in chains/ No matter what I do/ There’s no coming back from you.”

Having spent the past year establishing himself as one of the UK’s most exciting new global artists, Bradley Simpson powers into an epic 2025 by sharing his new single ‘Carpet Burn’.

The track previews the February 28th release of his eagerly anticipated debut solo album ‘The Panic Years.’ As with the previous singles ‘Cry At The Moon’, ‘Picasso’, ‘Daisies’ and ‘Always Like This’, the album ‘The Panic Years’ achieves a rare blend of qualities. Taking in touches of indie-rock, Americana, ‘80s synth and psychedelia, the songs also sparkle with pop addictiveness.

This album contains no booklet.

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