

This year will mark the end of the project known as The Spook School. They’ve released three full-length albums in that time: 2013’s Dress Up, 2015’s Try To Be Hopeful, and 2018’s Could It Be Different? They wrote giddy, ramshackle indie-pop songs about identity and self-discovery and finding a supportive community to call your own. The Scottish four-piece will embark on a final tour through the UK in the summer, wrapping up in Glasgow in September. The Spook School have announced that they’re breaking up. I was, alas, very late to the party, only catching them on a couple oof occasions around the promotion of that third album, which proved to be their last. My very good friend Aldo championed The Spook School from the outset, seeing them on many an occasion across Scotland and further afield. label, Alcopop! Records, the Spook School came back in early 2018 with their third album, Could It Be Different? The record addressed abusive relationships, gender issues, Brexit, and the struggle of staying alive in the modern world. After the 2017 holiday single “Someone to Spend Christmas With” on their new U.K. The group’s next appearance on record was Continental Drift, a split LP on Fortuna POP! and Slumberland that also featured songs by the Mercury Girls, Wildhoney, and Tigercats. Try to Be Hopeful was issued in October of 2015, again by the Fortuna POP! label.

As Nye began testosterone therapy, his voice started changing subtly as the recording process continued. The band’s second album further explored gender identity. That same year, their shared love of sketch comedy paid off with the band being invited to do the music for the second season of the BBC Three show Badults. The album’s energy and raft of catchy songs earned them a burgeoning following and a slot at the 2014 N.Y.C. The indie pop mainstay signed the Spook School and released their first album, Dress Up, in 2013. It was followed by a single for Cloudberry Records later that year, which led to them catching the ear of the Fortuna POP! label. While attending the University of Edinburgh, bandmembers Nye Todd (guitar/vocals), Adam Todd (guitar/vocals), Anna Cory (bass/vocals), and Niall McCamley (drums) made their first recordings (in Adam Todd’s bedroom) and released the happily lo-fi results on cassette in 2012 with the title I Don’t Know, You Don’t Know, We All Don’t Know the Spook School. Edinburgh quartet the Spook School play a brand of indie pop that combines the hookiness of C-86 bands like Shop Assistants with the punky energy of the Buzzcocks, then adds lyrics that deal passionately with sexuality and gender.
