British Alt Rockers
VIVA LOS VILLAINS
Has Released Single
‘Live Fast’

With their latest single ‘Live Fast‘, Viva Los Villains tap into something instinctive and untamed – an unfiltered rush of motion, escape, and youthful defiance that refuses to sit still.
Built on gritty guitar work and stripped-back rhythms, the track carries a raw immediacy that feels deliberately unpolished.
There’s no gloss here, no overproduction – just a lived-in sound that leans into imperfection as a strength.
The hook hits hard and lingers, anchoring a song that thrives on urgency without ever losing its sense of control.
Lyrically, ‘Live Fast‘ unfolds like a snapshot taken somewhere between departure and destination.
It opens with a sense of detachment – walking away without a plan, without a map – and evolves into something closer to a mantra.
The recurring line,
“Live fast and die last”,
captures that push-and-pull between reckless freedom and the quiet awareness of consequences.
Beneath the surface bravado, there’s a subtle vulnerability that gives the song its emotional weight.
Musically, the band draws from a wide spectrum without feeling derivative.
You can hear echoes of the garage-rock bite of The White Stripes, the expansive indie textures of Of Monsters and Men, and the melodic instincts of classic acts like The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.
But rather than leaning on nostalgia, Viva Los Villains filter those influences through a modern, rough-edged lens that feels distinctly their own.
The accompanying video mirrors that same restless energy.
Instead of a staged performance, it plays out like a series of fleeting moments – fragmented, impulsive, and alive.
It reinforces the song’s core idea:
that sometimes the act of moving forward, no matter how uncertain, is the point itself.
‘Live Fast‘ doesn’t try to offer answers.
Instead, it captures a feeling – one of motion, risk, and the fleeting nature of freedom – and lets it unfold in real time.
British Alt Rock Band
VIVA LOS VILLAINS
Has Released Single
‘Hunter’s Moon’


Viva Los Villains are:
Tom Marfleet
Jonathan Ordidge
Aaron Bailey
discography:

EP

album

They may have run out of luck – but for Viva Los Villains, ‘Hunter’s Moon‘ is exactly where the fire begins.
Emerging from the coastal streets of Chichester in 2024, the trio have wasted little time carving out their own space within the UK’s ever-evolving alt-rock landscape.
With a sound that fuses grit and introspection – drawing from rock, indie, and a subtle thread of Americana warmth – Viva Los Villains are building a catalogue rooted in emotional candor and sharp melodic instinct.
Their latest single, ‘Hunter’s Moon‘, may be their most magnetic statement yet.
Built on distorted guitars and a steady, driving pulse, the track captures the quiet devastation of love slipping away – not in flames, but in slow motion.
There’s no dramatic collapse here, just the creeping realization that something once incandescent has dimmed beyond repair.
The band let the emotion breathe.
Vocals feel exposed, unguarded, teetering between vulnerability and defiance.
“Don’t call me baby / One time it was love…”
The refrain lands without melodrama, its repetition almost hypnotic.
It mirrors the mental loop of revisiting someone who still occupies your thoughts – “living rent free”, as the lyric cuts with modern precision – long after you know you should have let them go.
The imagery of the ‘Hunter’s Moon‘, ancient and luminous, collides with present-day emotional fallout, grounding poetic symbolism in stark reality.
Fronted by the songwriting partnership of Tom Marfleet and Johnny Ordidge, later joined by multi-instrumentalist Aaron Bailey, Viva Los Villains operate as a tight creative unit.
Their influences are audible but never overbearing.
There are flashes of stripped-down garage rock reminiscent of The White Stripes, echoes of widescreen indie-folk uplift in the spirit of Of Monsters and Men, and melodic nods to timeless architects like The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.
Yet the band never feel derivative.
Instead, they channel those touchstones into something fresh – lean, textured, and emotionally immediate.
If ‘Hunter’s Moon‘ feels like a late-night drive beneath a cold sky, headlights slicing through memory and regret, then their January 2026 single ‘Anaconda‘ reveals another shade of their identity.
Darker, coiled, and charged with tension, it transforms desire into something dangerous – proof that the band are unafraid to explore both the tender and the feral sides of their songwriting.
For a group barely a year into their existence, Viva Los Villains are already demonstrating depth beyond their timeline.
Their music balances classic rock foundations with a modern indie sensibility – introspective, hook-laden, and unflinchingly honest.
If you’re searching for alternative rock with emotional weight, indie grit with backbone, or a UK band blending vintage influence with contemporary edge, ‘Hunter’s Moon‘ is more than a promising single.
It’s a signal flare.