SpaceAcre
indie rock duo from London
London
Biography
Phoebe Little and Jas Scott spent a chunk of the early 2020s proving that a lockdown-born project didn't have to sound like a bedroom demo. They tracked the Overthrown EP with a level of cinematic density that usually takes a five-piece band and a month of studio time, but they did it as a duo out of London. Most indie rock outfits in that scene lean on the jangly and the polite. SpaceAcre went the other way, leaning into these massive, floor-tom heavy arrangements that felt like they were scoring a thriller. By the time they hit the 2024 sessions for In My Head, the polish started to sharpen into something more aggressive. It wasn't just about the atmosphere anymore. The writing got meaner and the production tightened up, ditching the hazy wide-lens folk-rock elements for a sharper, digital-meets-analog friction. They aren't trying to be your favorite polite coffee shop soundtrack. They’re aim for the gut with big, distorted low-end and vocals that cut through the mix like a razor.

