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Liimo share cover of the classic Alexander O’Neal single ‘If You Were Here Tonight’

Following on from the release of their debut album ‘Volume 1’ in August, which has now been streamed more than 7 million times and lead single ‘Thinking About It’ clocking up 2 million streams alone, Edinburgh-based trio Liimo (meaning a little more) now return to share a cover of the classic Alexander O’Neal single ‘If You Were Here Tonight’.


Given the band’s appreciation for the 80s pop sound, their cover of ‘If You Were Here Tonight’ lends perfectly to their distinct synth-pop direction. Filled with sweeping production and textured atmosphere, this new offering follows up their newest full-length with rich and ambient effect. Adding their own unique flair for adventurous compositions to this most-loved ballad, gives their return a truly warm and captivating aesthetic.
Speaking about the new rendition, the band said, “After reading Richard Russell’s book ‘Liberation Of Hearing’ and with a mention to Alexander the idea grew from there. We’re big fans of Alexander O’Neal, ‘Hearsay’ being one of our favourite albums. We were listening to ’If You Were Here Tonight’ recently and it resonated so much with how we’re feeling at the moment. Missing loved ones and wishing you could be with them, so we thought we’d put the Liimo spin on it.”


Since first introducing themselves with their debut single ‘Pineapple Radio’ back in 2018, Liimo have always been consistent in their pursuit of bold and shimmering alt-pop anthems. Releases ‘All I Do’ and ‘Thinking About It’, which cemented Liimo’s talent for writing killer pop music, saw them gather incredible pick up from media tastemakers such as The Line Of Best Fit, The Scotsman ‘Under The Radar’, Earmilk, Euphoria Magazine and Record of the Day to name a few, as well as support from major DPSs. With earlier cuts ‘Old School’, ‘If You Love Me’, ‘Pink In Heaven’, ‘Get Weird’ featuring LA artist Lizzy Land landing support on The 405, CLASH, EARMILK, 1883 Magazine, Euphoria Magazine, and When The Horn Blows to name a few. Last year, they covered Usher’s ‘U Remind Me’ for Mahogany’s COVERS sessions.
With over 7 million streams across all platforms, Spotify support on New Music Friday (UK and Japan), Your Office Stereo, Discover Weekly, Chilled Pop Hits, All New All Now, New Pop Revolution, Apple playlisting on Today At Apple, In My Room, Mellow Days, New Music Daily and a Best New Pop play by BBC Radio 1’s Adele Roberts, Liimo’s status as one of the UK’s most exciting new bands has only solidified.
The pop trio’s music revels in these complex times, as they provide aspirational anthems that’ll implore you to reconnect with the world around us a little better. With each song, Liimo have created an intoxicating sound where sweet melodies rub shoulders with idyllic, dreamy lyrics.
It all starts with the name, says lead singer Kieran. “Liimo is an abbreviation of ‘little more’. The thread between our lyrics is that we aspire for a touch more of everything; a little bit more time, a little bit more money, a little more indulgence, a little more love. Sometimes these things aren’t the answer, but we’d sure like to try it out ourselves.” They dream of a better world and are now doing their best to will it into existence.
The band know each other from their native Edinburgh, with Kieran, CJ and Jamo all meeting as teenagers. They bounced about in different projects and got to know each other via the creative scene, but it was only when they started working together as Liimo a couple years after moving down to London that things clicked. “There’s an authenticity writing together because there’s a collective pool of memories to pick up on and pull influence from,” Kieran says. “Our lyrics are about real life, being broke, love in a big city with the romanticism of warm nights far away.”
Liimo’s music isn’t preachy, nor does it pretend everything is rosy and well, but it does what few acts have managed to do in the modern age; to create a dialogue for listeners to identify their lives with.
The group bonded over their mutual love of thoroughly modern pop stars. US R&B act Khalid, pop sensations Lany and Drake’s sultry protégé Majid Jordan remain touching points for where the group are headed musically, but the band’s meticulous nature and chasing of an identity runs deeper than their songs. “There needs to be a whole vibe and belief in what you’re doing but that spans more than music, it’s about the aesthetic, how you act, what you say, everything.” Have a browse at the band’s pastel-plastered social media channels and you’ll instantly get an idea of the vision that they’re chasing.
Why wouldn’t you want a little bit more? Liimo think you deserve it.

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