London’s genre-bending provocateurs Sorry are back, and they are crash-landing head first into 2025 with “Jetplane,” an exhilarating new single that’s every bit as wild as it is magnetic. From the first moment “Jetplane” takes off, it’s clear that Sorry is not here to play the game by any rulebook.
The track, “Jetplane” is a whirlwind plunge into left-field indie, where melody morphs and rhythm never remains in a lane. It’s gloriously varying, like pure guts and creative force holding it together. But underneath the erratic, skittering surface is a clear sense of purpose. It’s the sound of a group that knows precisely what it is doing, even if it’s intentionally dragging us through the tumult.
It emphasizes how well the video weaves in and out of the music, both produced by the ever-creative FLASHA Productions, a collaboration between Sorry’s Asha Lorenz and Flo Webb, and well the video complements the song. It’s a gritty, surreal visual sidekick, homing in on the muscular heaviness of the track’s studio shine while peppering in off-kilter cameos that tap into a messy underside of internet culture.
Where most bands would smooth the edges down, Sorry revels in them. “Jetplane” doesn’t apologize for being loud, weird, or disjointed, as it leans into that chaos and dares you to follow along. The song’s structure is like it is eternally falling apart and getting built back together, but it also has an emotional arc that pulls you through the destruction. This isn’t a radio-ready melody or a standard-issue indie bop. “Jetplane” is for anybody who wants to feel the music in their bones, something raw, honest, or slightly deranged.
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