Artemas is a UK singer-producer who blends alt-pop hooks with glassy synths and confessional lyrics.
Hook Science, Bedroom Roots
After a burst from viral singles in 2024, he has shifted from DIY drops to full rooms, which changes how the choruses bloom. Expect
i like the way you kiss me near the end and
if u think i'm pretty early to set the tone. The crowd skews mixed in age and gender, with eager front-row singers and quiet mixers and producers hanging mid-floor clocking the drum programming. He often self-cuts vocals at home and stacks low doubles for a ghostly edge, then tucks a whisper track under the chorus.
Who's in the Room
Early in his path, he stress-tested ideas by posting short drafts, sometimes cutting second verses when the hook proved stronger than the story. These ideas about songs and production are reasoned projections from recent releases and clips rather than a fixed plan for your night.
The Artemas Crowd, Up Close
Quiet Flex Fashion
The room reads minimalist and sharp, with dark cargos, sneakers, simple tees, and silver chains, plus a few heart motifs that nod to LOVERCORE. Fans belt the first hook, then soften for verses so the wordplay and side comments can breathe. When
i like the way you kiss me drops, a brisk clap pattern from the pit mirrors the snare, a tiny ritual that starts on cue.
Rituals Without Rules
Merch leans to clean fonts, neutral colors, and one piece that hides a lyric on the back. You will spot disposable cameras and phone filters that mimic film grain, matching the songs' from-bedroom-to-stage feel. Between songs, someone will toss the line 'do you think i'm pretty?' and the room answers without missing a beat. People leave talking about production choices and favorite lines as much as big notes, which suits a crowd that listens close.
How Artemas Builds Tension and Release
Hooks Built for Contrast
Live, he keeps the vocal dry and forward, using light tuning as a color on intros before opening into a warmer tone by the second chorus. Arrangements lean on a rubbery sub-bass, tight kick patterns, and glassy keys, with one guitar adding scratchy off-beat texture. Songs usually launch at album tempo, then pull the bridge a hair slower so the final hook feels bigger.
Small Moves, Big Payoff
The band leaves air in the verses, dropping pads so the talky lines feel like a private aside before the synths bloom. On small-room dates earlier this year, he tried a first verse with only kick and vocal, a small shift that makes the chorus explode without extra volume. Lighting favors bold color blocks and quick blackouts on downbeats, supporting the rhythm instead of stealing focus. Expect a few playful rearrangements, like tagging an a cappella hook at the end or swapping claps for tom rides on a reprise.
If You Like Artemas, You'll Like These Too
If This Hits, That Will Too
Fans of
Joji will hear the same slow-burn mood and the flip from low talk-singing to airy highs.
Jeremy Zucker brings bedroom-pop clarity and soft-focus beats that line up with this show's intimate tone.
Lauv is a fit for people who like pastel synths, big plainspoken hooks, and midtempo grooves that leave room for words.
Adjacent Sounds On Tour
If you enjoy the sly bite and clipped phrasing of
ROLE MODEL, the banter and crowd pacing here will feel familiar. All of these artists prize clean drums and space, which keeps the lyric upfront and lets small production moves land.