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Twinnie Releases ‘Sad Boy’ Single

British country-pop artist Twinnie has recently released the official musicvideo for her new single Bad Man and has now followed that up by sharing her latest offering Sad Boy. 

Now based in Nashville, the singer/songwriter is gearing up for the release of the Blue Hour EP this September allowing her to continue growing her audience on both sides of the pond and this visual is an extension of that new chapter. 

Sad Boy is the latest part of the Blue Hour story with the track offering listeners the flip side of a breakup when somebody leaves you thinking they’ll have it better elsewhere only to realise that they’ve lost something amazing! Too little too late in this case.”How’s it feel to lose the queen of hearts” is a standout lyric. 

“Sad Boy is the classic tale of someone thinking the grass is greener. They break up with you and break your heart and then want to come back. Inspired by true events, karma played her part well. I wrote this with Barnabas Shaw (Meghan McKenna) and Paul Sikes (Lainey Wilson / Matt Stell). 

The Blue Hour EP is all about capturing moments in time and I think Sad Boy captures the flip side of a breakup.  I love the production on this one too. It’s very angsty yet has strong country-pop influences thanks to the slide guitars but was also inspired sonically by Lana Del Rey and Ash”- Twinnie

Twinnie learned early on what it meant to be marginalised, and how music could transcend stereotypes. Her father was a Romany gypsy and her mother was a hard-working, traditional English mum. The oldest of four children growing

up in rural Yorkshire in a travelling caravan, she was the scrappy school-yard defender who became a passionate advocate for equality and inclusion as an artist and successful businesswoman. This ethos led to her founding I Know A

Woman, a music collective that aims to increase opportunity, community, and support within the music industry by standardising mental health therapy within all label and publishing deals. She established her reputation in the UK with her debut album ‘Hollywood Gypsy’ and the subsequent ‘Welcome To

The Club’ EP, earning three playlists and Album of the Week status at Radio 2, airplay from Radio 1’s Future Pop, and acclaim from the Daily Telegraph, who made glowing comparisons with the likes of Shania Twain and Taylor Swift.

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