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‘Our songs are a result of what feels good to get out’

The Independent

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June 01, 2025

Hard at work on Never Enough’, Turnstile’s upcoming visual album, Hannah Ewens talks to singer Brendan Yates about intuition, reinventing hardcore and praise from Charli XCX

- Hannah Ewens

‘Our songs are a result of what feels good to get out’

Turnstile's Brendan Yates was curled up in bed at his Baltimore home during Charli XCX's recent Coachella set - oblivious to her announcement that "Brat Summer" was sort of over and "Turnstile Summer" was about to begin. It wouldn't remain a mystery to him for long; within minutes, millions had seen his band’s name plastered in all caps on a towering screen behind her. “I thought it was a joke,” he smiles, remembering how his phone lit up with messages from friends trying to get his attention. “I was like, ‘What is this AI image?’”

It’s six weeks later, and the 35-year-old frontman is briskly strolling through a leafy park in Los Angeles, his tawny hair bouncing, as he recalls the pop star’s premonition over a video call: “She’s really special and makes music that resonates with a lot of people, so to get that nod was really nice.” It was unexpected for a pop star, even one as preternaturally ahead of the curve as Charli XCX, to offer such a glowing endorsement of a hardcore band, but that’s a limited descriptor for Turnstile, a group who operate with a similarly leftfield vision as her.

While Turnstile emerged from the early 2010s hardcore scene, they always stood out – not just because of Yates’s dynamic singing or their aversion to the black uniform of hardcore, but for their unique musical DNA that connects with a sprawling and diverse audience. Their music is still, on the surface, what the average listener might identify as hardcore – aggressive riffs, breakneck shouts for vocals, excitable breakdowns – yet just as often, it’s none of those things.

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