The Rills
Please contact venue for tickets
Tickets subject to 10% booking fee
This event has now passed
About Event
Voodoo Daddy’s | 68a London St, Norwich NR2 1JT
Please note: Voodoo Daddy’s is not wheelchair accessible.
The Rills have certainly shed a skin or two to reach this point, on the eve of their effervescent debut album ‘Don’t Be A Stranger’. Produced by Dave McCracken (the indie mastermind behind many Ian Brown solo records and key works by dEUS and The Rifles as well as lending a hand to albums by the likes of Depeche Mode, Sports Team, The Snuts and Beyoncé), ‘Don’t Be A Stranger’ sees these three young friends take that untapped energy that made them viral sensations and darlings of the grassroots scene and direct it something more considered, complete and heartfelt.
They didn’t have a lot of choice when they came out of uni, hungry to make a break when COVID shut the world down. “We were just a little idiot band,” admits Spencer. “Obviously we had these dreams, but then lockdown happened and we were forced into doing TikTok and all that stuff because we didn’t have a way to play or release music.” It worked, and The Rills quickly found themselves with millions of likes on TikTok, thousands of streams, and a healthy following on social media. “All of a sudden, it blew up, we had fans and we we’re talking to the NME. Everything in that time, we scrambled together.” The fans followed them to the shows, where their live performance and the songs came with that same young punk charm, “trying to match our online personas”, as Spender puts it. “The indie funniness was working for us, so we thought, ‘That’s who we are’.”
They didn’t have a lot of choice when they came out of uni, hungry to make a break when COVID shut the world down. “We were just a little idiot band,” admits Spencer. “Obviously we had these dreams, but then lockdown happened and we were forced into doing TikTok and all that stuff because we didn’t have a way to play or release music.” It worked, and The Rills quickly found themselves with millions of likes on TikTok, thousands of streams, and a healthy following on social media. “All of a sudden, it blew up, we had fans and we we’re talking to the NME. Everything in that time, we scrambled together.” The fans followed them to the shows, where their live performance and the songs came with that same young punk charm, “trying to match our online personas”, as Spender puts it. “The indie funniness was working for us, so we thought, ‘That’s who we are’.”
Contact Us
If you wish to speak to a member of our team for general box office enquiries, ticketing and venue accessibility please contact the students union reception: