Balu Brigada
  • Balu Brigada

    Balu Brigada

    Henry and Pierre Beasely—the Auckland, NZ-born duo of brothers, co-vocalists, co-writers, and co-producers a.k.a. Balu Brigada—craft multi-dimensional alternative pop layered with levels of lush live instrumentation, cinematic soundscapes, and festival-ready hooks. After piling up hundreds of millions of streams, selling out shows, and garnering widespread praise from People, Rolling Stone, i-D, and many more, the band elevate to another stratosphere altogether on their debut full-length album, Portal. They consciously decided to swing for the fences with their first proper LP, defying genres without apology, exceeding expectations, and making an eclectic, edgy, and enigmatic statement. It’s the sound of two brothers realizing a lifelong purpose that they’ve committed themselves to. 
    “The record dives into deep examinations of doubt, recklessness, and loss in an effort to map out previously uncharted territory and emerge with a fuller sense of self on the other side,” shares the band. “By traversing a bold range of sounds and warping the boundaries of genre, Portal balances ethereal soundscapes with hard-hitting stompers to create a rich sonic environment for the listener to pass through. Our love for the swirly, warping echoes of psych music made a lot of the album sound like a portal to another dimension. Thematically, this is the Portal from our past lives to where we’re at now.” 
    Henry and Pierre took quite the trip to get here. Over the course of three years, the guys notably created songs around the world, working back home in New Zealand as well as in New York, Berlin, Los Angeles, and beyond. Each location left its imprint on the music, yielding “heavier and grungier energy” for the NYC recordings and “a softer and calmer” vibe for the NZ material. 
    Living out of suitcases between sessions and tours, the pair wholly devoted themselves to pushing the envelope musically and delivering a debut album worthy enough to stand the test of time. As such, the creation of Portal was far from pretty, yet it was honest and cathartic soaked in blood, sweat, and tears. 
    Rather than rely on outside collaborators, Henry and Pierre continued to write, produce, and record every note themselves. By challenging one another, they bottled the tension, vulnerability, and understanding between them into the music. 
    So, the record often plays out like a deep discussion among two brothers, best friends, and bandmates all at once. 
    “There was a deeper examination of self and an increased level of honesty with each other,” the band reveals. “Scars of a love lost, fresh wounds inflicted by industry, and revelations of self-doubt have all been conversations we’ve had with each other and subsequently funneled into Portal.” 
    By working so candidly with one another, the brothers confidently break boundaries, delivering an aural odyssey that teeters on an axis of otherworldly escapism and personal experience. Its melodies may resound to the heavens, yet its emotion is irrefutably grounded and utterly relatable. 
    They set the stage for Portal with the breakout single “So Cold.” It not only gathered 34 million total streams and counting, but it also notched their very first #1 at radio in the US, claiming the top spot at Alternative. They made their late-night television debut on ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel LIVE! with a stunning
    performance of the song. Plus, it claimed a coveted spot on the FIFA 2025 Official Soundtrack, and SiriusXM spotlighted it as a “Critical Cut.” 
    The pair really opened up the world of Portal with the epic single “Backseat.” Stretching across the six-minute mark, it struts to the center of the dancefloor as a disco-fied future-rock anthem. The track’s slick bassline thumps above a snappy beat and JUNO synth line, giving full body to the groove. Distinct claps hit in time with down-picked electric guitar, and the vocals swoon on a sarcastic and scornful bridge, “Stay with me, I don’t even like your company, I just wanted you to comfort me while I keep my eyes on the road.” It peaks on a catchy chorus, “I think I’m done with all the speeches from the bleachers, don’t wanna hear it no more from the backseat.” 
    Elsewhere, tremolo-picked guitar awash in reverb echoes through samples of unsettlingly weird laughter on “Golden Gate Girl.” The vocals set the scene, “I took a trip across the Bay…You said I could come out to see you.” It culminates with a shimmering and sun-kissed California hook, “You Golden Gate Girl.” 
    Soft vocals swoon over dreamy guitar and a glitchy beat on “Isolation.” Icy delivery chills during a proclamation, “It’s a cold I can’t explain.” 
    Then, there’s “What Do We Ever Really Know?” A robotic chant gives way to a fluid guitar lead and existential ponderance, “What do we ever really know?” Portal concludes as its finale “Butterfly Boy” flutters into focus. The bass warbles beneath breathy vocals, dissolving into yacht rock-style keys and nostalgic lyrics a la, “Remember the time we sat on the beach.” 
    They’ve certainly come a long way. Since high school, they independently honed their chops for years until landing a deal with Warner Music Australia, Atlantic Music Group and ARRO Records in the United States. The group cultivated their signature sound with the I Should Be Home EP [2022] and Find A Way EP [2023]—highlighted by the fan favorite “Designer” which amassed 26 million Spotify streams and counting. Along the way, they also incited the applause of everyone from Coup de Main and OnesToWatch to People who christened them “Best New Artist.” Twenty One Pilots even notably selected Balu Brigada as special guests on their massive The Clancy World Tour across North America, Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, Europe, and the UK. 
    With their biggest headline tour to date on the horizon and more surprises in store, Balu Brigada come out on the other side of Portal with a bold, bright, and brilliant body of work. 
    “A debut album means a realization of what Balu Brigada is and what it wants to be,” the band leaves off. “We’ve always experimented with blurring the boundaries of genre and sonics, but Portal has been the first concise realization of what the boundaries of that world are. Finding this balance and coupling it with our most honest and vulnerable writing has allowed us to create the first fully matured glimpse of Balu Brigada as a project.”
    BOILER 
    Balu Brigada craft multi-dimensional alternative pop layered with levels of lush live instrumentation, cinematic production, and festival-ready hooks. Henry and Pierre Beasely—the Auckland, NZ-born duo of brothers, co-vocalists, co-writers, and co-producers Balu Brigada—effectively step through a sonic doorway with their music. Since high school, they independently honed their chops for years until landing a deal with Warner Music Australia, Atlantic Music Group and ARRO Records in the United States. The group cultivated their signature sound with the I Should Be Home EP [2022] and Find A Way EP [2023]—highlighted by the fan favorite “Designer” which amassed 26 million Spotify streams and counting. Along the way, they also incited the applause of everyone from Rolling Stone, Coup de Main, i-D, and OnesToWatch to People who christened them “Best New Artist.” Twenty One Pilots even notably selected Balu Brigada as special guests on their massive “Clancy Tour” across North America, Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, Europe, and the UK. The duo reached critical mass with their track “So Cold.” It not only gathered 34 million total streams and counting, but it also notched their very first #1 at radio in the US, claiming the top spot at Alternative. They made their late-night television debut on ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel LIVE! with a stunning performance of the song. Plus, it claimed a coveted spot on the FIFA 2025 Official Soundtrack, and SiriusXM spotlighted it as a “Critical Cut.” After piling up hundreds of millions of streams and selling out shows, the band elevate to another stratosphere altogether on their full-length debut album, Portal, introduced by the single “Backseat.”