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TAHM strike back with scorched-earth grunge on new single 'Little Devil'

  • Writer: FLEX
    FLEX
  • Jun 26
  • 1 min read
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TAHM aren’t pulling any punches on 'Little Devil', their latest single is a visceral outcry dressed in distortion and defiance. A snarling return from the UK trio, the track finds them channelling the slow burn of emotional exhaustion into something volcanic. From the opening riff, there’s a sense of pressure building: this is the sound of a relationship teetering on collapse, where silence is never safe and every word feels like a lit fuse.


What makes 'Little Devil' so cutting is its refusal to dwell in victimhood. While it grapples with the emotional strain of manipulative dynamics, it refuses to sink into submission. Instead, it rages forward; gritty, volatile, and driven by a razor-edged determination to reclaim power. Katie Palmer’s vocals cut through the mix with fierce clarity, backed by a thunderous rhythm section that gives the song its unrelenting drive.


TAHM’s roots in the ’90s alt-rock underground still pulse through every note. But with a punchy, contemporary sheen that could sit comfortably alongside artists like Wolf Alice or Royal Blood, the band sounds more current than ever. The production, handled by Ian Palmer, strikes a perfect balance between raw energy and purposeful precision; never over-polished, but dialled in just enough to land each blow with impact.


Having already reestablished themselves with the searing '17 Years', 'Little Devil' solidifies TAHM’s resurgence as a reinvention. It’s a declaration that TAHM have endured the fallout, and they’re not here to tiptoe through the wreckage.



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