rhirhi at half moon putney

Getting Older, Getting Older: Rhirhi’s debut album where musical evolution meets lyrical frankness

Now based in South London, Rhirhi is an unsigned indie bedroom pop songwriter and artist who grew up on the Isle of Wight, curating songs with themes of love, loss and mental health.

Jack O’Sullivan delves into her debut full length album, Getting Older, Getting Older, a love letter on childhood bliss and the woes of growing up against a backdrop of nostalgia. The album is released on 15th December. Ed


There’s a cheerful misery in this ode to youth. With age, many would argue, we lose. Whether it’s our childlike wonder, innocence or naivety, Getting Older, Getting Older is both a celebration of these, as well as a demonstration of the struggle to cling to all that is safe in childhood.

Artistic influence and musical evolution
Meshing a lyrical frankness and brash candour, akin to Elliot Smith, with a willowy shyness reminiscent of Dodie.

Her first full length album, we’re seeing more of Rhirhi on one release then we have so far. Not just in length but in versatility, we still hear the minimalistic and raw records we’re familiar with, demonstrated in Bittersweet and 15 Forever, as well as an exploration into more abstract subsets of sound that manage to envelope you as a listener, like Pass By and High.

Themes of joy and sorrow in modern life
Recounting the joys, in the blissfully simple but sugary sweet Perfect Day, and the all-to-common sorrows of absent self-esteem, grief and that nagging sense of inadequacy, which we hear healthily discussed throughout the album, although most succinctly portrayed in the title track.

Musical nostalgia and the struggle with time
Perfect Day reminds you of a pre-beatnik love song, something that one could imagine being plucked from the age of crooners and the jukebox. While Getting Older, Getting Older opens the album with an apprehension to go forward, weighed down by a longing for youth and the sense that time has left us in its wake.

Self-reflection and connectivity in songwriting
Rapidly shifting between moods and topics yet never losing its momentum, although it is an album of lived experiences you are prompted to look within yourself.

Little Things Today embodies this sentiment of self-reflection structurally beginning in first person with a confession, the spouting of innermost thoughts, before shifting to a second person direct reference message of reassurance and familiar comfort that inevitably seems aimed at the listener.

Stream Getting Older, Getting Older from 15th December and let’s hear your thoughts.

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Find out more about Rhirhi by visiting her website, where you’ll find links to all her social media accounts.