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Tatum Quinn

Tatum Quinn is nobody’s fool in her fiery pop-rock anthem Short Supply

Montreal-born and raised Berklee college grad Tatum Quinn rolled with the pop-rock punches in her latest single, Short Supply. Not that she has to prove she is a force to be reckoned with after opening for Kool and the Gang, the Pointer Sisters and April Wine. But if any track asserts her unreckonable talent, it’s Short Supply, which galvanizingly proves that she’s nobody’s fool.

With atomically powerful pop vocals laying down the hooks over the stadium-filling crunchy guitars and adrenalizing percussion, it is all too easy to get caught up in the no holds barred account of Quinn’s lack of patience for usury hacks who will use emotional blackmail to claw their way back into a relationship they took for granted.

Ending the trailblazingly authentic anthem with “go fuck yourself” followed by an affable giggle, we couldn’t help falling in love with Quinn’s emboldening motive to create inspirational music that advocates empowered autonomy that little bit more.

Short Supply will officially release on November 10th. Catch it here.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

The devil is in the visceral detail in Tatum Quinn’s latest alt-rock unveiling, Sell Your Soul

The price was evidently right in Tatum Quinn’s latest quintessential feat of viscerally jarring alt-rock “Sell Your Soul”. The arrestingly torrid and industrially mechanised track perfectly captures the frustration that becomes all-consuming in the presence of something that you would do anything for – pressing self-destruct and tearing apart the fabric of your reality not off the table.

The lyrics (Ring his phone just to check if the devil is home) are just as efficacious as the post-rock-meets-pop-hook instrumentals and Quinn’s hell-hath-no-fury vocals at depicting the kind of psyche storms that are enough to make you swear off wanting for good. Sell Your Soul seriously gives Chase & Status’ Let You Go’ a run for its money in terms of gravitas and intensity.

Sell Your Soul is now available to stream on all major platforms via this link.

Review by Amelia Vandergast