Skip to content
  • About us
  • Music
  • Celebrities
  • TV and Movies
  • Fashion
  • Entertaiment
  • Life Style
  • Travel and Health
Style Focus

Style Focus

  • About us
  • Music
  • Celebrities
  • TV and Movies
  • Fashion
  • Entertaiment
  • Life Style
  • Travel and Health
  • Toggle search form
  • Lessons to learn from Joost Klein’s disqualification: Vulnerable people deserve better support at Eurovision Uncategorised
  • Jessie Buckley ‘overwhelmed’ to be starring in Oscar-tipped Hamnet Uncategorised
  • Modern interpretation of hopak by showman Uncle Zhora
    Modern interpretation of hopak by showman Uncle Zhora Uncategorised
  • Poll: Which Eurovision 2024 song is your favourite so far? Uncategorised
  • Molly-Mae Hague ‘shocked’ by Tommy Fury split Uncategorised
  • Kendall Jenner Hosts Star-Studded Halloween Party: Billie Eilish, Channing Tatum and More Dress Up Uncategorised
  • “Grandma's pies”: a cultural renaissance through cooking, style and communication
    “Grandma’s pies”: a cultural renaissance through cooking, style and communication Persons
  • Poll: Who should win Norway’s MGP 2025? Uncategorised

Sound of 2026: Reluctant rockers Royel Otis tipped for success

Posted on 5 January 2026 By Admin No Comments on Sound of 2026: Reluctant rockers Royel Otis tipped for success

Sound of 2026: Reluctant rockers Royel Otis tipped for success

Press photo of Royel Otis standing against a plain blue background. Guitarist Royel Maddell covers his face with long, pink tousled hair
Royel Otis are named after their members: Royel Maddell (right) and Otis Pavlovic

Aussie guitar duo Royel Otis show up to our interview looking artfully crumpled, beers in hand – but all is not quite what it seems.

The band – made up of twenty-somethings Royel Maddell (guitar) and Otis Pavlovic (lead vocals, guitar) – are on a rare day off. Last night, they played the last of three sold-out concerts at London’s Brixton Academy. It was their 81st gig of the year.

They’re dishevelled because they’ve just got off a bus to Glasgow, ahead of show 82. The beers are alcohol-free Guinness.

“We’re learning how to look after ourselves [on tour],” says Maddell. “We just try to stay healthy and hit the saunas. Try to stay sober. Hence the Guinness.”

It’s a new level of professionalism for a band that never really intended to become a major touring act.

But Royel Otis’s cosmic, sun-kissed indie anthems (and a viral cover of Murder On The Dancefloor) have put them on the map – and earned them fifth place on BBC Radio 1’s Sound of 2026.

They were voted onto the list, which highlights the emerging artists who could make a mainstream breakthrough in the coming year, by an international panel of more than 170 DJs, producers and artists – including Sir Elton John, who has championed the band on his radio show.

In previous years, fifth place has gone to the likes of Rosalía, Central Cee and George Ezra – putting Royel Otis in rarified air.

“We feel honoured,” says Maddell, while admitting that, as Australians, “it’s the first we’ve heard of the list”.

“We’re learning about it as we go. But it seems amazing. We’re in good company.”

Royel Otis on stage in Milan, 2025
The band sold more than 100,000 concert tickets in 2025

Royel Otis formed in 2019 but, by all accounts, should have started years earlier.

Both musicians lived and worked in Byron Bay, New South Wales. They hung out on the same beaches, stayed in the same holiday homes, and Maddell’s dad was friends with Pavlovic’s uncle.

In the end, however, they were introduced by their girlfriends.

“Roy was working at a bar that we’d go to sometimes and [we] just ended up playing pool, talking about music. It was pretty straightforward,” says Pavlovic.

“Otis had a demo of a song, and I said, ‘Send it to me’,” says Maddell, picking up the story.

“I thought it was going to be horrible, because they usually are – but the next morning, I played it while I was in the shower, and I was like, ‘Oh, this is sick’.”

Maddell sent back some music of his own and the pair quickly started exchanging ideas. For the elder of the two musicians, it marked an abrupt change of plans.

“I wanted to be behind the scenes, writing music for someone else,” confesses Maddell.

Royel Otis pictures in a scratchy, out of focus publicity shot from the start of their career
The band started writing and recording almost immediately after their first meeting

Instead, they went straight to the studio, riffing on their shared love of The Cure, Oasis and – rather brilliantly – the Alessi Brothers’ 1976 soft rock classic Seabird.

They quickly found a sound of their own. Summed up by Pavlovic as “jangly guitars and chanted layered vocals”, it’s both richly harmonic and somewhat ramshackle – born of a decision to embrace spontaneity and leave studio mistakes intact.

They finessed the formula on 2021 single Bull Breed – “the story of a reckless night out”, gambling away their pay cheques and smoking “all the cigarettes… like Courtney Love.”

“I don’t know if it’s celebrating those nights or taking the piss,” laughs Maddell.

“Like betting on horses – we don’t do that stuff, but we know the kind of lairy groups that do.”

Breakthrough single Oysters In My Pockets is equally rambunctious.

Described on release as “our way of showing appreciation to the bivalve molluscs that put some boost in our juice and some fire in the libido”, the duo literally wrote the song over “a barbecue and a few beers” after visiting the local supermarket to stock up on shellfish.

It’s one of a number of songs in their discography – see also Fried Rice, Egg Beater, Kool Aid and Jazz Burger – seemingly inspired by food.

“We just try to be honest,” laughs Pavlovic. “If there’s food on our minds, there’s food on our minds.”

‘A sexy sword’

Those early singles built significant buzz, but the duo weren’t ready to commit to a career.

“We just wanted to record music. We didn’t want to be a touring band,” says Maddell, who credits their manager, Andrew Klippel, with pushing them to think bigger.

“We needed a bit of persuading,” agrees Pavlovic. “I think if we had it our way, we probably wouldn’t be where we are.”

Even today, Maddell does his best to keep his identity hidden, permanently hiding his face behind his tousled, neon pink fringe and using an assumed name (he was born Leroy Bressington).

“I still feel a bit nervous,” he says, despite selling more than 100,000 concert tickets last year – 60,000 of them in the US alone.

Many of those fans got their first taste of Royel Otis through two viral radio sessions.

The first, recorded in January 2024, put a nostalgic indie spin on Sophie Ellis Bextor’s Murder On The Dancefloor.

Four months later, a cover of The Cranberries’ Linger for Sirius XM entered the US Top 100 and became the band’s biggest song on Spotify, with 223 million plays.

The song choice “was a spur of the moment thing”, says Maddell.

“I remember our drummer at the time was like, ‘You can’t do that. There are just certain songs you don’t touch’.”

Adopting the time-honoured tradition of ignoring anything your drummer says, they pushed ahead.

Even so, says Pavlovic, “it took us three attempts to get it right”.

“We were terrified,” says Maddell. “We thought it was going to be horrible.”

Instead, Linger has become a permanent fixture of their live shows. Last month, they even got to perform it with Cranberries guitarist Noel Hogan in London.

“He was such a gentleman,” says Maddell. “He wanted to do our version of the song more than he wanted to do his own.”

How does it feel to have the covers eclipse their own material?

“They’re kind of like our biggest songs, which is bittersweet,” says Maddell. “But we’re just appreciative that so many people who would never have heard our band discovered us with those covers.

“So it’s a double-edged sword, but it’s a sexy sword.”

Sophie Ellis Bextor on stage with Royel Otis. She has her arms raised to the sky, in a sparkly dress with the word "disco" stitched onto it in a variety of fonts. The band smile as they look at her.
Sophie Ellis Bextor joined the duo on stage at last summer’s Reading Festival for a one-off version of Murder On The Dancefloor

Anyone who digs further will discover more musical treasures. Since 2024, Royel Otis have recorded two albums at breakneck speed.

Their full-length debut, Pratts & Pain (named after a London pub), saw the band experiment with “crazy, makeshift instruments” and “weird open tunings” without sacrificing their wavy guitar sound and feel-good melodies.

The follow-up, 2025’s Hickey, was written as their careers took off – and their relationships suffered.

“Because we toured the whole of 2024, there were a few people that both of us had to say goodbye to,” says Pavlovic.

“I had to break up with my girlfriend because she just wasn’t handling being always alone while I was off travelling the world,” adds Maddell.

“But I also had some family members pass, so a lot of goodbyes happened at the start of this year and last year [2025 and 2024]. You just miss so much of your personal life when you tour so much.”

They admit they had to be talked into making a second album so soon.

“In this day and age, there’s a pressure to keep going and constantly release new stuff,” says Pavlovic. “Everyone has their own opinions about that [but] I don’t think that’s necessarily the best thing to do.”

Perhaps as a result, the album campaign got off to a shaky start, with the band issuing an apology for the seemingly misogynistic lyrics of the lead single, Moody.

But after acclaimed debuts at the Glastonbury and Reading festivals (where Sophie Ellis Bextor made a guest appearance), Hickey gave the band their first UK chart entry, and earned Royel Otis nominations for best group and best rock album at Australia’s Aria Awards.

Starting the year on Radio 1’s Sound of 2026 list suggests there won’t be much let-up, no matter how frazzled the band seem to be.

“We’ve been on the bus, basically, for the last two years,” says Pavlovic. “We’ve got January off, then I want to start work on writing new music and stuff.

“But I think I’d like to take a little bit longer. Live a little bit, so I’m not just writing about being on the road.”

By our estimates, that means we can expect the band’s musical tribute to low alcohol beer by about October.

Sound of 2026 logo

One act from the top five of the BBC’s Sound of 2026 will be announced on Radio 1 and BBC News every day this week, culminating with the winner on Friday.

Read more on Radio 1’s Sound Of 2026 website.

Adblock test (Why?)

Uncategorised

Post navigation

Previous Post: Corrie and Emmerdale collide for first time in explosive crossover episode
Next Post: How Geese took flight to become ‘Gen Z’s first great American band’

Related Posts

  • Gene Hackman’s daughters and Clint Eastwood lead tributes to star Uncategorised
  • Selena Gomez Stuns in Plunging Red Gown at VMAs Pink Carpet Uncategorised
  • Beverly Hills 90210 star Shannen Doherty dead at 53 Uncategorised
  • Russell Brand: Woman accuses comedian of sexual assault on film set Uncategorised
  • Corrie and Emmerdale collide for first time in explosive crossover episode Uncategorised
  • Albania: RTSH confirms Festivali i Këngës 62 artists and song titles Uncategorised

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Maya Jama and Ruben Dias’ Cheshire home targeted by burglars
  • ‘Why can’t women have experience?’ New Bridgerton series tackles sex taboo
  • VICTORIA NIRO Unveils Bilingual Single “In the Dark” and Sets Her Sights on Europe
  • Olivia Dean set to ‘light up’ Mobo Awards stage
  • What to expect from the Bafta nominations

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • March 2022
  • November 2008

Categories

  • announcements
  • Events
  • Fashion
  • music
  • Persons
  • Uncategorised
  • Sam Ryder releases new album “Heartland” and prepares for a concert at OVO Arena Wembley Uncategorised
  • Dr. Komarovsky reveals the shocking problems of wounded soldiers and civilians in Ukraine
    We need to save, not amputate: Dr. Komarovsky reveals the shocking problems of wounded soldiers and civilians in Ukraine Uncategorised
  • Rebel Wilson book published in the UK with blacked out text Uncategorised
  • Rena Song Fest 2024: Over 150 songwriters and artists from 32 countries craft new hits for Eurovision at songwriting camp Uncategorised
  • Wallace & Gromit without Peter Sallis is ’emotional’ says Nick Park Uncategorised
  • Theatre school founder Sylvia Young dies aged 86 Uncategorised
  • Historic theatre saved after closure U-turn Uncategorised
  • Theo Evan is Cyprus’ Eurovision 2025 singer Uncategorised

Copyright © Style Focus

Powered by PressBook News WordPress theme