
Manchester’s intense, all-feeling alt-rock four-piece, Brain Leak, make a leap from introspection as one of last year’s emergent ‘ones to watch’ into bold new territory, releasing the kinetic, fast-burning first single of 2026, Skin Remembers – OUT NOW. Embarking on a fresh chapter in the developing script of singer-songwriter Tara-Gabriella Engelhardt’s honest account of twenty-something misadventure and repair, the single quickly follows the band’s emotionally and sonically expansive December debut EP, Put Back Together.
Known for pairing raw emotional candour with unpredictable songcraft, Brain Leak have built a reputation for fearless, confessional songwriting. From the riot grrrl torrent of Something Skin to the secret-whispering intimacy of Put Back Together, Engelhardt’s frequently disquieting, diaristic lyricism met the sonic sophistication of fellow bandmates, bassist, Giulia Bonometti (Working Men’s Club), guitarist, Jess Branney (Peaness) and drummer, Sidonie Hand-Halford (Orielles) to score repeated support from BBC 6 Music, Radio X and trusted voices from across the digital new music mediasphere.
From the first stark, high-tempo hit of snare drum, Skin Remembers signals another unpredictable shift in Brain Leak’s abundant energy. Clearing the storm-cloud introspection for something brighter, faster and more propulsive, the artist’s latest collaboration with co-producer, Russell of electro-post-punk project Material Goods, rests on an unrelentingly direct bassline. The dizzying intensity of infatuation is layered on top, expressed in scuzzy, increasingly chaotic guitar riffs and Engelhardt’s most confident vocal performance to date.
Where the stripped approach of early singles cast a shadow in the shape of post-grunge icons, Hole and Mazzy Star, the climbing drama and self-assured delivery of Skin Remembers pushes Brain Leak into the realm of dominant feminine power populated by Wolf Alice, Amyl and The Sniffers and Dream Wife.
“’Skin Remembers’ is a bit of a sonic change-up from Brain Leak’s previous releases,” Engelhardt explains. “I started playing around with a little Roland T-8 drum machine and it was inspiring me to write more up-beat songs. I like the fact that you can really move to it, but it retains signature Brain Leak motifs like the slightly unpredictable structure and vulnerable storytelling. Lyrically, it’s a mixture of me recounting a night with someone and reflecting on my experience of being infatuated by them.
“On occasion, it’s as if my day-to-day rational brain has been kicked out of the driver’s seat and suddenly, I’m memorising the tone of their voice, the way they say certain words, the nuances of their facial expressions and every detail of their being.”
Since landing an unwieldy vessel loaded with confession, memory and therapeutic release with debut single, Trying, a year ago, Brain Leak have accelerated through the UK’s live venues with preacher’s zeal. Taking the message as far as New York last springtime for a special loft space invitational, the band’s physical presence is maintained with regular appearances. Upcoming Brain Leak shows are confirmed as follows: •Thu 26 March – Manchester, Low Four
Thu 7 May - Wrexham, Focus Wales
