For Good Neighbours, everything started when they found their rhythm on social media. The project of songwriters Oli Fox and Scott Verill â who have previously released spritely indie-pop under various monikers â has maintained momentum on TikTok this year, via a lengthy roll-out of demos and behind-the-scenes footage. Itâs a savvy, if slightly fatiguing tactic: the duo teased debut single âHomeâ in dozens of videos, tagging each clip with general statements like âPOV: youâve found your roadtrip soundtrackâ or encouraging listeners to indulge in a main character moment.
Itâs perhaps no surprise then that the loudest audience ovation is reserved for when Fox makes mention of the platform tonight (April 24). âSome of you may know us from TikTok,â he says knowingly. âAnd we took a bit of time to release an actual song.â The band are self-confessed super fans of Bleachers, and their blueprint is clear: big, washed-out, atmospheric tunes with lyrics about life-changing friendships that could find a place in Spotifyâs Gen Z-targeted Lorem playlist.

This seamlessness is not lost on stage. When played live, âHomeâ, recent single âKeep It Upâ and a handful of unreleased tracks slide and swirl into a bright, easy-going pop haze. Beyond giving the former some extra gusto, replete with a multicoloured light display, thereâs little to differentiate some of the newer material: Foxâs delivers âRippleâ with a high-pitched cadence, occasionally straining to be heard atop a three-piece backing band.
With a silver chain lightly bouncing atop his graphic t-shirt as he wiggles around, Fox is an affable performer â and it would perhaps be churlish to put Good Neighbours down for the cheerfully uncomplicated mood that their melodies inspire. The energy in the room is very much âgood times, all the timeâ, with music that you could call warm and familiar, buoyed by some big-chorus magic (a Grouplove redux, even).
Fox and Verillâs vision translates best during a more freewheeling âDaisiesâ, during which they rip into guitar solos and leap about joyously. It sparks the question: with a little more grit and wonkiness, could Good Neighbours, like their peers Royel Otis, make the leap to festival stages? Having successfully made an impact in an oversaturated online space, thereâs enough here to suggest that theyâll soon take the next step.
Good Neighbours played:Â
The post Good Neighbours live in London: TikTok stars spin obvious influences into heartfelt anthems appeared first on NME.