Data may be outdated
Last updated: 1 month ago — Click refresh to get the latest statistics.
The next generation of English Folk Rock has finally arrived thanks to ‘Lost Robins’, and
they’re not being quiet about. Formed in the summer of 2025, this ragtag of seasoned
young musicians from the Cambridgeshire and Fenland areas are hellbent on keeping folk music alive and kicking out at the modern world. Their stacked-up symphony of electric
guitars and hard-hitting bass’n drums, peppered with the fiddling’s of accordion, flute, and violin creates an organised mess that the Levellers would be proud of.
You might be forgiven at first glance for confusing them with a country pub session band, swapping stories and songs (from either 200 years ago or last week) late into the night around the big table at the back until the landlord begs them to go home. And whilst all this is of course true, this band undoubtedly hail from a community that takes their music, culture, poetry and history very seriously. They are a band out of time, just old enough to cultivate respect for the tradition that came before them, and just young enough to carry that torch forward.
They haven’t been together long, but they’ve hit the ground running, bagging two major
gigs and a fully recorded album before the summer was out. All seven tracks of their first record, were produced by Jake Day at the award-winning North Acre Studios
they’re not being quiet about. Formed in the summer of 2025, this ragtag of seasoned
young musicians from the Cambridgeshire and Fenland areas are hellbent on keeping folk music alive and kicking out at the modern world. Their stacked-up symphony of electric
guitars and hard-hitting bass’n drums, peppered with the fiddling’s of accordion, flute, and violin creates an organised mess that the Levellers would be proud of.
You might be forgiven at first glance for confusing them with a country pub session band, swapping stories and songs (from either 200 years ago or last week) late into the night around the big table at the back until the landlord begs them to go home. And whilst all this is of course true, this band undoubtedly hail from a community that takes their music, culture, poetry and history very seriously. They are a band out of time, just old enough to cultivate respect for the tradition that came before them, and just young enough to carry that torch forward.
They haven’t been together long, but they’ve hit the ground running, bagging two major
gigs and a fully recorded album before the summer was out. All seven tracks of their first record, were produced by Jake Day at the award-winning North Acre Studios
Monthly Listeners
393
Monthly Listeners History
Track the evolution of monthly listeners over the last 28 days.
Followers
88
Followers History
Track the evolution of followers over the last 28 days.