PAMELA Is What Happens When the Club Crashes Into a Guitar Amp
Blistering synths. Britpop chaos. And a breakup in a club toilet. Meet PAMELA — the Franco-British duo turning sweaty dance floors into emotional battlegrounds.
If you’ve ever cried in the corner of a rave or kissed someone you shouldn’t during a guitar solo, PAMELA already knows you. The British-French duo is hardwired for exactly that collision — where indie rock’s grit meets the pulse of a packed dance floor.
Their latest move? A dizzying, synth-heavy rework of Blur’s Girls & Boys that doesn’t just nod to the original — it spins it through a club at 2 a.m., past the bathroom stalls, and straight into 2025.
“It’s obviously a banger,” the duo admits. “But we didn’t want to just cover it — we wanted to make it manic, darker, a bit off-balance. Still fun, but definitely PAMELA.”
That’s their sweet spot: emotion you can dance to, chaos you can scream through. Their sound — often compared to LCD Soundsystem, Soulwax, and The Cure — doesn’t feel borrowed. It feels lived-in. Like heartbreaks and high kicks happening at the same time.
The Origin Story (Sort Of)
PAMELA was never supposed to be a genre experiment — it was more like fate in a sound booth.
“We come from different musical backgrounds,” they explain. “One of us is more post-punk, the other deep into electronic music. PAMELA is the messy place where those worlds collide. We didn’t plan it. It just… happened.”

That collision has become their identity. Grit meets glamour. Emotion meets sweat. Wine meets beer. Or, as they put it, “French emotion and British chaos.”
Blur, Beer Bottles, and No Guilty Pleasures
Their creative process is gloriously unfiltered. Studio sessions are powered by instinct, not polish — ideas are captured live with synths, guitars, and sometimes even empty beer bottles turned percussion instruments.
“If there’s no emotion, we bin it,” they say. “We’re not precious — it’s about making the song feel alive.”
That rawness carries into their visuals too, crafted by third band member and visual architect Jacques Frantz (aka Guillaume Menard). “It’s not about being polished. It’s about instinct, texture, feeling. Sometimes that’s beautiful. Sometimes it’s messy. We love both.”
Live? Think ‘Sweaty, Unstable, Generous’

While their recordings pulse with energy, it’s their live shows where things really explode. “That’s when we lose control — with the crowd. That’s when it feels real.”
And with new material on the way and more touring in sight, PAMELA is leaning deeper into the chaos: “More intensity. More emotion. More fun. We’re writing like crazy and just want to connect. Make people dance. Make people feel something.”
Asked who they’d love to work with, their dream team is as chaotic as it is iconic: “Daft Punk for the robots. David Bowie for the elegance. Idles for the energy and love. And Damon Albarn — if you’re out there, call us.”






