1. What drink would you recommend to sip on while listening to your new music?
Probably just sparkling water with lime. It’s simple, clean, kinda reflective. My stuff isn’t really party music — it’s more about zoning out, thinking, or driving at night. So yeah, something that doesn’t get in the way.
2. Please give us an update about the new single, album, tour, video?
The new single’s called Dolphins, it’s about that weird feeling when you meet someone and it’s like you’ve known them forever, like you’ve crossed paths in another timeline.
I made it all at home — produced, mixed, mastered. Fully DIY.
The video’s out now too — I directed it with my friends Harri and Dave. It’s kinda surreal and hazy, like a memory that’s gone glitchy.
We’re also playing shows in Newcastle, Sydney, Melbourne and Wollongong this October. They’ll be really immersive — a mix of sound, visuals, and lighting. We want people to feel like they’ve stepped inside the songs.
3. Name 5 things we should know about you as a band?
Everything’s DIY.
I’m obsessed with atmosphere.
Every track starts with a feeling, not a genre.
I’m still learning, and that’s kinda the point.
The live show’s about experience, not just performance.
4. What fashion style or brand would best describe your music?
Something minimal but with texture — like Yohji Yamamoto or a vintage jacket you’ve worn in forever.
5. Which harmless conspiracy theory do you wish were true?
That dreams are shared spaces and we bump into each other there without realising it.
6. If you could change anything about the industry, what would it be?
Less pressure to constantly post or “stay relevant.”
More space to actually make stuff, and let it breathe before throwing it out there.
7. Tell us more about your songs — topics, message?
They’re more about feelings than statements. I write about memory, time, connection — stuff that’s hard to explain. I’m not trying to teach anything, just building little spaces people can step into.
8. A question you’ve never been asked, but wish you had?
Q: What do you want people to feel when the music stops?
A: Maybe a kind of calm confusion. Like they’ve remembered something they can’t put into words.
Your Instagram: www.instagram.com/atlasfranklinalexander