Meeting the UKâs next best girl band in a dessert parlour on a weekday afternoon is as much of a sugar rush as youâd imagine. Cornered in a cosy booth in the Kings Cross branch of Creams on a damp Wednesday afternoon, NME finds sparkling new pop trio Say Now â Yssy Salvanera and Maddie Haynes, both 20, and Amelia Onuorah, 21 â who warmly greet us with a round of hugs across the table.
It doesnât take long before thereâs loud squeals of laughter, impromptu singing, sharing of waffles, brownies and ice cream and too many anecdotes to keep up with. The group now live together in north west London and are best friends, but not too long ago they were total strangers to one another.
Three years ago, Amelia and Yssy â who had each been discovered online individually â were introduced by their manager with the loose idea of forming a girl band. But there was a âmissing pieceâ until they found a perfect fit in Maddie through Instagram a year later. The first time they all met was in the same Creams weâre sitting in now.
Once the line-up was completed, they moved into Maddieâs family home and perfected their noughties-inspired R&B harmonies, getting signed to Atlantic [Cardi B, Charli XCX] a year into their journey together. But there was one problem: they didnât have a band name. Up until July 2023, the girl group built their following under the working title of needanamebro, only settling on Say Now about two weeks before they officially announced it. â[Say Now] just reflects how we are as a band,â explains Yssy. âCommunication, saying the truth, being honest with people and yourself. We reflect that a lot in our lyrics and our journey.â
Their handful of sassy singles about dating, friendship and breakups â which boast the Y2K-era attitude of groups like the Sugababes with the youthful optimism of Little Mix â has earned them a 300k-strong TikTok following and Instagram recognition from artists like Jack Harlow and SZA. With another swaggering new single, âBitch Get Out My Carâ, now out in the world, Say Now have their eyes set on pop superstardom â and are intent on doing it their way.
NME: Youâve documented your journey as a band from the very beginning. At a time when many rising female artists have been unfairly labelled as âindustry plantsâ, how does it feel to reclaim your narrative?
Yssy: âWe always say there’s just no point in trying to hide how we became a band. Also, it’s fucking cool to be signed to a major label. I think that was probably one of our main dreams as a kid.â
Amelia: âAnd we still had to work for it. When we were sharing stuff, it was kind of for ourselves. When me and Yssy first started our TikTok, we were just like, âHow do we get people to know who we are? Letâs just post on TikTok. And Yssy came up with a needanamebro and it was so casual. And I remember when we first started posting, we were literally getting like 10 views.â
Did you find it was less pressure not having a name at the start?
Yssy: âFor a bit. In terms of posting, we were doing so well that we kind of forgot that we actually had to find a name. And then the pressure was coming on.â
Maddie: âAlso, people were like, âYou have a name and youâre just hiding it!â No, we actually just did not have a name.â
Amelia: âWe released three songs under needanamebro. I wish the pressure was lower. But behind the scenes, we were stressed that we didnât have one. But we were just glad that people liked that we didnât have one. Though we did get a lot of hate on Twitter. They were like, âThis name is so stupid!ââ

Weâve had many successful girl groups come out of the UK â Spice Girls, Sugababes, Girls Aloud, to name a few â what do you think it is about girl bands from the UK that makes them so iconic?Â
Amelia: âUK culture is about being outspoken and itâs quite raw, and naturally it’s quite authentic. And I think that’s why people like Spice Girls, they were just so themselves, not very media trained. Loud, British. I feel like thatâs what works for British girl bands.â
Maddie: âUnapologetic. They just give us the most fun energy. With UK girl bands, thereâs something fun, silly and cool at the same time.â
You opened for Dylan across the UK and Ireland earlier this year, marking your first tour as a group. What did you learn about performing live together?
Yssy: âPerforming is so much more fun than you would expect it to be. When we first started performing, we were so nervous. And then, because we had to do it every day, we got used to it and started actually having fun on stage and performing.â
Amelia: âYou stop being so precious about each performance. Before, it would be a one time show, and weâd rehearse for ages. I feel like it makes your nerves so much worse, because you put all of your stakes in one show. And as soon as we did this, by the sixth show we were like, âItâs just another performanceâ.
Maddie: âAs long as we’re having fun on stage then the audience will have fun too.â
Has there been a surreal moment yet where youâve realised, âIâm in a girl bandâ?
Yssy: âI think it was when we first started living together. I was just sat on our balcony and I was like, âWow, âIâm in a girl band and I live with them. That is so madâ. Being in such a dream job is such a privilege.â
Maddie: âFor me it was our first ever show at Dijonss. Coming on stage for the first time and having fans singing our songs back to us.â
Amelia: âI think Hammersmith Apollo, the first day of the Dylan tour. It was just crazy, we were so nervous and once we got on the stage, I kept looking out to the top and I was like, âThere’s so many people hereâ.
“There’s no point in trying to hide how we became a band â it’s fucking cool to be signed to a major label” â Yssy Salvanera
Your Instagram bio says âbe that girlâ. Whatâs a song that makes you feel like that girl?
Maddie: âEspressoâ by Sabrina Carpenter. That is that girl, do you know what I mean? âIâm working late, âcos Iâm a singer!â
Yssy: âMy one right now is â360â by Charli XCX, because the music video gave so much, and Charli XCX is just so âitâ girl.â
Amelia: ââJumpâ by Tyla. If that song comes on, I feel like that bitch.â
The music video for your new single âBitch Get Out My Carâ features an epic dance break. Is there currently a gap for an all-singing, all-dancing girl band in the UK?
Yssy: âFor sure. We havenât really seen a band yet thatâs actually dancing and singing fully, like Destinyâs Child. We look up to a lot of K-pop bands. We saw Blackpink last year and they were so good, and now thereâs so many more coming out like NewJeans.
Amelia: âI love BABYMONSTER. Theyâre amazing singers, and theyâre amazing dancers.â
Maddie: âThereâs a few solo artists like Tate McRae, and people love her for it. Why is that not happening in girl bands? Thatâs what weâre trying to do.â
Say Nowâs new single âBitch Get Out My Carâ is out now
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