Introducing: Another Day
- BabyStep Magazine
- Apr 23
- 3 min read

If you've ever wondered what it feels like to be hit by a tidal wave of sound, fury, and full-throttle performance, look no further than Another Day. The Kent-based indie grunge four-piece are redefining what it means to put on a live show—fusing 90s grit, modern indie melody, and high-flying stage antics into a set that doesn’t just shake the walls, it rips the roof off. Fresh off their blistering UK headline tour, they’ve left a trail of wide-eyed, sweat-soaked believers in their wake—and we caught up with them just after they blew the lid off London.
1. Your live shows feel more like a three-act play than a traditional gig — complete with flips, poetry, and pure chaos. Was that theatrical energy always part of the vision, or did it evolve naturally on stage?
The flips and stuff we’ve been doing for a while even before the band started up so we’ve been doing that since our first show. After meeting Astile and getting him on spoken word / tambourine It’s naturally evolved into what the shows are today. However, what’s really important to us is that no two shows are the same. We’re about spontaneity and feeding off the emotions of the moment. We wanna be as human as humanly possible.
2. Your sound blends 90s grunge grit with melodic indie rock in a way that feels both nostalgic and fresh. Who were the key influences behind that fusion, and how did you land on that unique balance?
Melody has always been super important to me. When I digest music it’s melody which makes me fall in love. It’s then lyrics which help me to understand why. Same for when I write. It’s always melody first which for me contains all present emotion. I couldn’t pinpoint all influences as the list would be too long. As it’s such a common question I actually wrote out all the bands and artists that I’ve been influenced by so that I could hand it to people when they asked me. It was about four pages long.
3. The chemistry between you all on stage is palpable – how much of that comes down to being family, and how does that closeness shape your creative process behind the scenes?
Yeah it definitely helps. I feel like Jonte and I read each others minds, we just know what’s going to happen next without saying anything. Creatively, I mean we still live together so ideas are floating about all the time.
4. ‘Merry Go Round’ and ‘Guilty’ feel like emotional anchors in your set – what do those tracks represent for you personally, and where do they sit within the story of your latest EP, Doghouse Roses?
I’ll never forget when we first played Guilty together. I wrote it super quick before a rehearsal. We went through it a few times got so buzzed up about it and played it that night at our show. It came during a time I felt the music we were playing as a band didn’t represent how I was feeling anymore. This was the first step away from it and it marked a new kind of era for us. Merry Go Round it the oldest of the four, I think it’s one of the better tracks from when we were a slightly different sounding band hence keeping it for the EP.
5. From BBC Introducing to packed-out headline shows, momentum is clearly building. What’s next for Another Day – and what can fans expect when you inevitably blow the roof off the next tour?
The music is just getting better and better. The EP is great. We love it. What’s next is even better.
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