Bathing Suits | Doom Club
The Lexington, London
25th February 2026
Pulsating electronic beats? Check. Atonal, jarring riffs? Check. Surfing the crowd in your knickers? Check. All in a day’s work for Bathing Suits. Steve Morgan wades into the mosh.
On a night for new sounds, a hungry, expectant, youthful Lexington crowd are attentive for the arrival of the excellently named Doom Club, whose sly, loose gutter funk gets the evening off to an impressive start. Arousing plenty of curiosity on the London circuit these past 18 months, the M25 corridor three-piece’s Beefheart-esque eight-hour rehearsal sessions are paying a handsome dividend. Opening number Worldwide On It is a joyously jaunty beatbox-driven affair, where shared rap-cum-playground-chant vocals recall Paul’s Boutique era Beastie Boys, dotted with flecks of Beck’s early slacker efforts. Underneath the quirkily knockabout, playful charm, there’s some real talent here. Sounds pop in and out of the mix, underpinned by squally feedback grooves and satisfyingly dubby bass. No Sense Make Sense calls to mind the much-missed Campag Velocet, PIL and The Slits.
The first rule of Doom Club seems to be that if you can hit it or strum it, then have a go. Instruments are regularly swapped – all three take turns on the bass. And they’re pleasing on the eye. Puppyish frontman Liam Duane has a haircut that could help him pass for ’70s poster boy David Cassidy at a distance; Katie Lee is a quiet delight, switching from synth to bass, where she bops absentmindedly, and Leo Cicero proves himself adept on either drums or bass, and also chimes in on vocals.

On Louder Than War’s radar as early as January last year and reviewed here, Leeds four-piece Bathing Suits have whipped up a splash on the socials with their vortex of sweaty industrial punk sturm und drang. Like the lost soundtrack of an Italian giallo splasher – think Suspiria re-enactment – visually, they’re something else – like a test-tube tryst of Throbbing Gristle and the Addams Family. Sporting a bra and pants – at least initially, she sheds the bra two songs in, twirling it triumphantly around – Freyja Blevins serves the meat in their big-beat manifesto, operating the drum box, engineering the BPM and generally dicking around with your heart rate.

With just a handful of recorded material so far, it’s all done in a frenetic, jagged, breathless 35 minutes, after which you feel like you’ve had your cheeks firmly slapped. Last year’s single I Can Be A Freak, with its nightmarish spiral into a sluggish swamp of high and low frequencies, is eagerly lapped up. New release Empathy is a swelling, screeching seven-minute, take-it-up, take-it-down assault of the senses which neatly encapsulates the band’s soundscape, pitched somewhere between Sheep On Drugs, Killing Joke and Ministry. There is no encore, because there is nothing left to say. There are, however, plenty of blown out cheeks and raised eyebrows. The novelty will be examined with more scrutiny as time passes, but for now, Bathing Suits are turning heads Exorcist-style and, what’s more, appear to be having enormous fun cresting the wave. Surf’s up.
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Follow Bathing Suits on Instagram and Bandcamp
Follow Doom Club on Instagram and Bandcamp
Words by Steve Morgan. You can find Steve on BlueSky and Instagram
Photographs by Robyn Skinner
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