With an all-you-can-eat buffet of styles at their disposal, their music could take any turn at any given moment. Indeed, Bambie suggests there’s stacks more unreleased songs waiting for their moment. When asked how representative Fangtasy might be of their musical future, they laugh.
“My music is just like my brain. It’s neurospicy! I don’t know if I have another song like Fangtasy, to be honest. Maybe it’s an outlier. But no, I have so many different flavours and I’ve got so many bangers in the vault. There’s some big dancey songs, some rocky songs, some country songs…”
There’s more than just a witchy aesthetic binding all these disparate sounds together. They might be a spooky individual, but Bambie’s not trying to scare you away. Instead, they’re luring you in. They’re connecting with you, and they’re connecting people.
At the end of their Grand Final performance at Eurovision, the last words they uttered after they’d finished their song were, ‘Love will triumph over hate.’ It might have been an injection of positivity in an unusually troubled, controversial edition of the contest, but perhaps this call for unity was also a mission statement.
Above all, Bambie says, their message is “to spread love and kindness through crazy art, [promote] acceptance, self-acceptance, highlight issues, change people’s minds and help people be more kind and accepting of others.” (True to form, when asked at the end of our conversation if there is anything else they wanted to talk about, they immediately reply ‘Free Palestine’.)
“I’m biased,” Bambie continues, “but I actually think [my fans] genuinely are the best. They’re so kind, they’re so good and I’m just so proud of the community we’re building.”