Self Esteem is Rebecca Lucy Taylor from Rotherham, who left Slow Club to make sharp, candid pop built on drums, chants, and spoken-sung lines.
From duo roots to a drum-led roar
The key shift was moving from indie duo compromise to full creative control, which made
Compliments Please and
Prioritise Pleasure feel bold and personal.
A likely set will lean on
I Do This All The Time,
Prioritise Pleasure,
How Can I Help You, and
Moody, with the room echoing the mantras.
What the night might include
Expect three singers moving in tight formation, live kit over thick samples, and a pace that climbs from confessional to full-voice release.
The crowd skews mixed in age, strong on queer community, plus friends who bond over hooks and plainspoken lines.
A lesser-known note is how early sessions leaned on dry rooms and tough drum programming to keep the voice clear and the rhythm front and center.
These thoughts on songs and production come from prior patterns and may not match the exact show you see.
What the Scene Around Self Esteem Feels Like
Slogans, color, and care
The scene feels welcoming and intent, with bold color fits, clean sneakers, and lyric tees that nod to
Prioritise Pleasure without shouting.
You hear people trade favorite lines at the bar and then speak them in unison during
I Do This All The Time, like a civic chorus.
Merch leans toward tote bags and simple type, and the pieces that move fastest usually carry a short phrase rather than a logo.
Chants rise on drum hits more than between songs, guided by the side singers' claps and cues.
Up front people dance hard, while the back rows hold space for focus, and both modes feel seen.
Post-show conversations compare which arrangements shifted from the record and which lyrics hit hardest that night.
It is a culture built on care and candor, where shared volume never steps on personal space.
The Pulse, The Choir, The Push of Self Esteem
Choir muscle, drum heartbeat
On stage
Self Esteem's voice sits dry and close, so the talk-sung parts feel like advice rather than theater.
The band stacks three-part harmonies to echo the record's choir, but they leave space so the kick and claps can punch.
Arrangements favor tom-heavy patterns, deep samples, and crisp handclaps, with synths shading the edges instead of crowding the center.
Little changes that land big
I Do This All The Time often stretches by a few bars so the room can echo key lines before the final swell.
How Can I Help You may pivot to a slower, heavier groove live, turning its stomp into something you feel in your chest.
Tempos rise across the night, then drop to a keys-and-voice moment that resets ears and makes the next chorus land harder.
Lighting snaps to strong blocks of color to underline hits and pauses, but the songs and voices carry the weight.
Kindred Spirits for Self Esteem Fans
Pop with backbone, feelings with lift
If you connect to her frank lyrics and big hooks,
Robyn will click, as both ride bright synths that carry heavier feelings.
Fans of tight vocal blends and community-forward rooms often also follow
MUNA, whose shows balance guitar sparkle with punchy beats.
If groove-first pop with elegant staging is your lane,
Jessie Ware fits neatly beside this.
For a sharper, theatrical streak and cathartic belt moments,
Rina Sawayama overlaps with this crowd.
All four acts reward close listening while still being easy to move to.
They bend studio arrangements on stage without dropping the hook.
If that mix describes what draws you to
Self Esteem, these names sit nearby.