SOAK 

  • On tour: no
  • Upcoming 2024 concerts: none

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Ashburn, VA, US Change

Past concerts

  1. Dec

    3

    2023
    London, UK

    Omeara

  2. Nov

    11

    2023
    Dublin, Ireland

    3Arena

  3. Oct

    24

    2023
    Barcelona, Spain

    La 2 de Apolo

View all past concerts

Biography

  • Born in Belfast but raised largely in Derry, Bridie Monds-Watson (aka SOAK) has been on a singular path throughout her eighteen years.

    SOAK started writing songs at the age of thirteen following a stint in the tragically short-lived covers band, That’s What She Said. Bridie had watched her Dad playing the guitar growing up and, keen to impress him, took to recording her first batch of lo-fi, acoustic demos in secret. “When I was younger I was unbelievably shy,” she says. “I didn’t really have many friends, and I wasn’t really close with my parents then – the idea of telling my Mum anything was just … no. So when I started writing songs it was a way that I could tell her something, but not directly. I could hide things behind words, which was easy for me. I’m always hiding behind words.” All she needed was a name, and she settled on SOAK, an awkward amalgam of ‘soul’ and ‘folk’ (even though her music was neither, it’s proved fittingly between-states ever since). Maybe more appropriately, it also spelt ‘Kaos’ backwards.

    Raw, intimate but shot through with moments of impatience, experimentation and joy, ‘Before We Forgot How to Dream’ is a coming-of-age record in more ways than one. Vividly capturing the rollercoaster of adolescence, it traces not only SOAK’s extraordinary journey in her own career thus far, but also those more universal themes of friendship, family, and what to do with your future. There are songs here, she says, “about regret and about how much one person can affect everything; about how I’m not very good at letting go of things, of bad memories or connections.” And there are those, too, about anger and arguments and confusion, about bullies, cheap thrills, the longing to be someone and “the desire to destroy things for no reason”.

    If the songs on ‘Before We Forgot How To Dream’ chart this period of SOAK finding her voice as a songwriter and her confidence as a young woman, they also document a certain loss of innocence in Monds-Watson’s life. Much is made of this mature-beyond-her-years sound and outlook, though it’s a perspective which is understandably alien to Bridie herself (“I am this age and I’m writing about being my age. I’m more aware of just how many young people are writing crazily smart things, and the fact that this shouldn’t be a surprise anymore – they just haven’t had the platform to showcase it”). So whilst SOAK’s lyricism centres on an idiosyncratically teenage universe, her debut album is ultimately about those bigger questions which become no clearer with age, and the compassion which comes with growing up.

    On its surface, ‘Before We Forgot How To Dream’ may appear nostalgic – romantic, even - towards a more innocent time, and despite the tumultuous tone which actually lingers beneath the record, there is a persistently positive element to SOAK’s music. “People grow up and nobody believes in Magic anymore, or you’re told to lower your expectations and that certain behaviour isn’t appropriate. This album is definitely about that time when you believed a bit more in things.” You’d venture that belief will take SOAK further yet in her young career, though ultimately her debut album seems to explore those joys and fears we take with us through life, from adolescence into adulthood – but simply get a little better at hiding.

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Live reviews

  • SOAK

    Really talented, and they were great to hear live. They sounded better than the record (as a good live band should), and they also played music I had not yet seen released. It’s always a treat to hear what one of your favorite artists is working on. I would recommend anyone to see them if you like the music.

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  • We went to go see her at the Swedish Music Hall in San Francisco, which is so intimate and perfect. Her voice is unreal live. Now I want the live album. It was an amazing performance, and she had a very endearing personality too.

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Find out more about SOAK tour dates & tickets 2024-2025

Want to see SOAK in concert? Find information on all of SOAK’s upcoming concerts, tour dates and ticket information for 2024-2025.

Unfortunately there are no concert dates for SOAK scheduled in 2024.

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