Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

The Best Of... So Far

1.9B streams

1,940,873,686

Inside In, Inside Out (15th Anniversar...

1.5B streams

1,484,224,427

Inside In / Inside Out (Acoustic / Liv...

194.3M streams

194,308,696

Listen

147.2M streams

147,174,752

Konk (Deluxe)

128.3M streams

128,287,611

Junk Of The Heart

107.6M streams

107,560,858

Let's Go Sunshine

84.9M streams

84,909,147

Inside In / Inside Out

62.2M streams

62,216,023

10 Tracks to Echo in the Dark

21M streams

21,040,507

Hello, What's Your Name?

20.5M streams

20,455,283

Biography

After a worldwide arena tour, the release of their 2018 UK Top Ten album ‘Let’s Go Sunshine’ saw The Kooks topping the bill at festivals across Europe and at home. The streaming boom had opened the Brighton band up to a new audience of young fans who loved their distinctive brand of indie rock. Coming off the back of a punishing tour schedule, frontman, Luke Pritchard vowed to take a bit of a breather. But instead, found himself right back in the studio. Spending much of his time in Berlin, Pritchard found himself working on The Kooks behemoth of a sixth album, ‘10 Tracks To Echo In The Dark’. Flirting with genres from 80s synth-pop to funk to prog rock, the album is still, at its core, an indie record, and a Kooks one, at that. It’s a record that takes that classic Kooks sound and adds something of a retro-futurist slant – both sonically and in mindset. It’s an album about being hopeful and seeing the great in the world, despite the darkness. You get a sense that we’re hearing from a new Pritchard – one whose demons are behind him and is optimistic about the future. The band have been experimental over the years – something that has been key to their longevity, but getting back to what people love about The Kooks was front of Pritchard’s mind. As The Kooks continue to reach an ever-growing audience of young fans, ‘10 Tracks To Echo In The Dark’ feels like a mission statement. It’s a celebration of getting through troubled times and a rallying cry for our future.