Lambrini Girls – Who Let The Dogs Out

Political punk perfection on this Brighton duo’s debut…

If you’re in a battle to write your debut album against the clock, do you take a careful approach that involves daily exercise and cooking dinner together, or do you stock up on a hell of a lot of booze and start writing, hoping for the best?

If you’re Lambrini Girls, you do both. Comprising Phoebe Lunny (vocals and guitar) and Lilly Macieira (bass), the Brighton duo wrote debut album ‘Who Let The Dogs Out’ in two quick bursts, before it was recorded with Gilla Band bassist Daniel Fox

The result is something that’s raw and fuzzy but also very catchy throughout, darkly funny and full of acerbic wit, and – above all else – important. 

There are songs fans already know well from Lambrini Girls’ live shows, like the opening triple whammy of ‘Bad Apple’, ‘Company Culture’ and ‘Big Dick Energy’, which take aim at the police, workplace misogyny and toxic masculinity.  “I’m onе of the nice guys/So why won’t you have sex with me?” snarls Lunny on the latter, tongue firmly in cheek.

When it comes to their political beliefs, they’re happy to put their money where their mouth is, too. Lunny was quoted in a 2023 interview as saying, “I will scrap any TERF [trans-exclusionary radical feminist], any day, in person, with my fists,” leading to an onslaught from anti-trans commentators, while their pro-Palestine stance caused them to withdraw from The Great Escape festival last year.

They’ve been compared to IDLES, who they’ve supported on tour, Riot Grrrl staples like Bikini Kill and Huggy Bear, and punk pioneers X-Ray Spex, but their sardonic humour and noise rock riffs set them parallel to, not directly adjoining, the acts they’re often likened towards.

And it’s not solely political commentary here. “I like your face, but not in a gay way,” Lunny deadpans on ‘No Homo’, with lyrics anyone who was at school in the 2000s could recognise from the playground, while ‘Special, Different’ takes a look at neurodiversity with a tenderness that belies its garage punk sound and ‘Love’ is a breakup song at its heart, Macieira going “bonkers mode” on bass.

Closer ‘Cuntology 101’, meanwhile, is the punk lovechild of Toni Basil’s ‘Mickey’ and Daphne & Celeste’s ‘U.G.L.Y.’, and revolves around a cheerleader-style chant of “C-U-N-T” while promoting self-care and, erm, shagging behind bins. 

As raw and energetic as ‘Who Let The Dogs Out’ is, it’s over after a breathless half-hour. There’s enough variety to keep attention firmly on this exciting duo, who might just be one of the best up-and-coming British bands. 

9/10

Words: Adam England
Inset Photo Credit: Harv Frost

Related: CLASH Goes Lambrini Tasting With Lambrini Girls

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