
Yumi Zouma are a transatlantic band without borders, with members based in New Zealand, Australia, New York and the UK. They’ve always excelled in bedroom pop that surfs the genres, “No Love Lost To Kindness” is a band record and their most honest, urgent, varied album yet. Lead single ‘Bashville on the Sugar,’ marked a significant evolution for the band, infusing their signature melodic heart into a new sense of buoyancy and raw glory, with fleet-footed guitar licks and nimble basslines propelling in concert with skittering drum beats, and led by a thrilling melodic forward motion. It finds them balancing urgency and melody in a track shaped by movement—both literal and emotional.
Weaving in MTA field recordings to reflect the pulse of public transport. ‘Blister‘ finds the band throwing off the introspective sound of previous releases and channelling raw energy and embracing reckless abandon, embracing a sound inspired by ‘Song 2′, ”Connection’, ‘Kool Thing’. “Why you gotta do me like that?!” sings Christine Simpson in a moment of do not f#ck with me attitude, as she scratches at a painful patch of skin, yet it’s smothered in utterly catchy refrains, giant chiming riffs and bouncing along on shuddering cymbal crashes.
‘While the album marks a rockier direction in large portions, there are still dreamy bedroom pop moments that hint at their previous work; the ambient and intoxicating ” Chicago 2am’ offers that variation, whilst the ironically titled’95’ has the wistful pulse and cinematic backdrops of 70s or 80s FM music, a muted moment more akin to something you might find on a film soundtrack.
‘Drag’ finds Yumi Zouma stepping into even heavier sonic territory. The track layers grunge-inspired guitars, industrial synth textures, and glitching arpeggios over a slow-building structure that erupts into a massive, cathartic chorus. Beneath the haze, choirs lurk under distortion, heightening the cinematic drama. Lyrically, the song traces frontwoman Christie Simpson’s journey of self-discovery following an ADHD diagnosis, balancing grief for lost time with the relief of acceptance. The result is both a farewell to struggle and a bold embrace of a new chapter.












