Dubbed “the merchant of pure gay chaos”, Lynks is a cult sensation from London’s underground scene. Hailed as “one to watch” by The Guardian, NME, Attitude, DIY, Time Out, Lauren Laverne, Jack Saunders, Huw Stephens, and Elton John, Lynks has built a reputation as one of the UK’s most electrifying, genre-smashing performers.
Now, armed with fresh passport photos and a suitcase full of latex and gimp masks, Lynks is stepping into a bold new era they’re calling ‘Global Sex’: a...
Dubbed “the merchant of pure gay chaos”, Lynks is a cult sensation from London’s underground scene. Hailed as “one to watch” by The Guardian, NME, Attitude, DIY, Time Out, Lauren Laverne, Jack Saunders, Huw Stephens, and Elton John, Lynks has built a reputation as one of the UK’s most electrifying, genre-smashing performers.
Now, armed with fresh passport photos and a suitcase full of latex and gimp masks, Lynks is stepping into a bold new era they’re calling ‘Global Sex’: a worldwide invitation to join their epicurean cult.
The first taste of this new chapter comes with “I Didn’t Come Here For Art”, a track that distills Lynks’ music down to its hedonistic essence. A floor-filling electro-clash unashamed banger built for bodies in motion: slick, pulsating production meets razor-sharp wit and lyrical dexterity that would make a large language model blush. A chaotic sermon for the unpretentious dancefloor’faithful.
Speaking on the track Lynks adds: “You know, there’s only so many times you can go to an “event” at some trendy “multi-use space” and be subjected to a bunch of pretentious bullsh*t “art” performances while all the straight mullet boys in their Palace tees nod their heads thoughtfully before you have to think – hey, enough is enough. This track is my call to arms. End all art immediately!!!”
Check the music video out above.
Read moreless