Thursday, April 23 2026

West Wickhams have always existed several inches to the left of reality, but ‘Sakura’ feels like the moment their dreamworld finally sharpens into focus. The duo’s latest EP is a gorgeous, crooked little shrine to memories, seasons, and identities, all wrapped in a post-punk haze that thrums with fluorescent tension.

Rather than simply nod toward the idea of impermanence, ‘Sakura’ inhabits it. Every track drifts like a petal caught in a gust: delicate one second, jolted the next, and wildly alive in the middle of its fall.

‘Up to the Old Tricks’ launches the EP with a nervous heartbeat as guitars twitch, drum machines flicker, and the melody slides in sideways like a déjà vu you can’t quite place. It’s instantly catchy but never obvious, like the musical equivalent of a wink from a ghost.

With ‘Ice Block’, the temperature drops into something glassier and more suspended. Elle Flores’ vocals float with frostbitten elegance. The mood is chilly, but underneath the sheen is a bruised tenderness that keeps you leaning closer.

‘As the Camera Shuts’ is a grainy slow-burn that feels like a memory trying to rewrite itself. Here, West Wickhams stretch their gothic instincts into something luminous, building tension from restraint instead of roar.

Then comes the jolt from ‘EQ The Viper’, a twitching sprint through synthesiser coils and subterranean bass. It’s sharp, kinetic, and gleefully unruly, offering a reminder that beneath the duo’s velvet mystery lies a pulse that kicks hard.

While ‘Save Yourselves’ closes the EP with the urgency of a prophecy muttered at twilight. It’s half-plea, half-incantation, carried on vocals that sound simultaneously intimate and otherworldly.

What makes ‘Sakura’ astonishing is how handcrafted it feels, as though it wandered in from a parallel pop history. Their influences echo faintly, but the atmosphere is entirely their own: feverish, stylish, and deeply human beneath all the spectral shimmer.

Review

Summary

‘Sakura’, new EP from West Wickhams
80%
Great

Rating

Songwriting
Production
Cons
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