"How good are they LIVE?" in the last 12 months on 100 (as of 5/17/24)
%
Based on
critic concert reviews
Real Live Certified
Artists are Real Live Certified if their live shows have broad critical acclaim
Critic Consensus
Based on 33 concert reviews, the critic consensus is that Goat Girl is rated as a watchable live performer, with decent shows overall. Goat Girl concert reviews describe live shows and performances as spooky, punchy, incendiary, lyrical, exciting, and captivating.
ON TOUR
The Fleece, Bristol, United Kingdom (June 11); Queen's Park Recreation Ground, Glasgow, United Kingdom (June 29); Various Venues, Manchester, United Kingdom (August 31); EKKO, Utrecht, Netherlands (October 14);
South London quartet Goat Girl have just signed to Rough Trade, but sound like they could've been on the label 35 years ago when they were releasing records by Raincoats, The Fall and Swell Maps - dirgey, spare and menacing.
Has Performed With
Critic Concert Reviews
Leftlion (UK)
March 30, 2024
%
A Sunday night is never a good night for a gig, everyone is knackered and getting ready for the week ahead. Goat Girl, however, managed to blast this bleakest of nights into the stratosphere...
I started at the door and had my hands stamped twice to ensure there was no possible way I would g
“We used to come to the Roundhouse to practice when we were like...fifteen,” Goat Girl vocalist Lottie Pendlebury recounts as the band saunter out into the scopic, and almost entirely silent, centre of the cult London venue
On All Fours, the latest statement from London punk quartet GOAT GIRL, can safely be considered one of the most exciting releases of this year. Captivating and country-tinged, the release saw the group come into their own, fuelled by their quick-witted lyrics, and apocalyptic soundscapes.
Like a lot of bands, Goat Girl were forced to release their latest album amid the coronavirus lockdown, unsure when they'd be able to play the new tracks to a live audience.
May 22, The Dome: Well-ironed tablecloths meet spiny post-punk as the south Londoners – with added flute, bugle, violin and keyboards – bring live music back to Tufnell Park