
Fresh Finds Spotlight: Jessica Winter
Alt-pop’s newest disruptor arrives fully formed — and delightfully unhinged — on her debut
“My First Album invites you to dance, blush, cringe and bounce back in one sitting.”
— God Is In The TV Zine
Jessica Winter doesn’t tiptoe into the room — she kicks the door wide open with glittering boots and a synth-pop blare. The South London singer, songwriter, producer, and self-proclaimed “drama queen” has been simmering on the fringes of alt-pop for years, but with her 2025 debut My First Album, she emerges fully realized — messy, magnetic, vulnerable, and very loud about it.
This isn’t your typical clean-cut debut. My First Album is sonically explosive, emotionally unfiltered, and joyously queer. Winter threads together alt-’90s guitar fuzz, ’80s pop theatricality, clubby synths, and massive, shout-along hooks into a record that feels like a post-everything pop tantrum — and we mean that in the best way possible.
The Sound of Jessica Winter: Alt-Pop with Teeth
There’s no shortage of emerging pop artists these days, but few sound like Jessica Winter. On My First Album, she builds a sonic identity that’s fiercely her own: a chaotic cocktail of synth-pop bombast, emo‑leaning lyrics, disco drama, and noisy, left-of-center production.
The album is a maximalist explosion — where Robyn meets Yeah Yeah Yeahs meets SOPHIE in a glitchy karaoke bar lit entirely by mood swings.
Tracks like “Choreograph” and “Funk This Up” swerve between dancefloor euphoria and emotional collapse. “Clutter”, a mid-album standout, is a swirling panic attack wrapped in shimmering synth pads and self-aware punchlines:
“I’ll make a mess of this / but at least I’ll make it loud.”
Then there’s “Play”, which recalls the grandiosity of ’80s Kate Bush with a modern freak-pop twist — all theatrical, all knowing.
Her production is as bold as her vocals — with synths that explode like confetti grenades, beats that lurch and stomp, and melodies that veer intentionally off-course before snapping back into place. It’s pop music with tension, wit, and jagged edges — designed not to soothe, but to move.
Queer, Campy, Unapologetically Herself
Jessica Winter isn’t just making music — she’s building a universe, and it’s one where queer identity, body anxiety, rage, heartbreak, and self-mockery all live in technicolor harmony.
“I always felt like the outsider,” she told NME, “but this album gave me permission to make a character of that.”
(NME Review – July 2025)
The persona that emerges is chaotic but controlled — one part performance art, one part personal catharsis. You get the sense that she’s both mocking and mourning herself in the same breath. The result? Songs that feel uncomfortably close but impossibly fun.
Critics have called her the “anti-It girl” of UK alt-pop — equally likely to serve a heartbreak ballad as she is to scream into a vocoder. Her brand of vulnerability isn’t soft-focus or sad-girl-core — it’s jagged, hyper-real, and defiantly not for everyone. Which is exactly what makes it so refreshing.
From Underground Icon to Future Festival Mainstay
While My First Album may be her full-length debut, Jessica Winter has been quietly shaping the UK underground for years. She’s collaborated with artists like Jazmin Bean and The Big Moon, opened for Metronomy, and was handpicked by Jessie Ware as a support act on tour.
Her earlier EPs (More Sad Music, Limerence) hinted at her theatrical inclinations — but they barely scratched the surface of the pop juggernaut she reveals herself to be on this record. Now, with critical praise rolling in from NME, Dork, God Is In The TV, and The Line of Best Fit, Winter is poised for a broader audience without losing an ounce of her weirdness.
Key Tracks to Check Out
- “Choreograph” – A pulsing, shout-along anthem about the artifice of relationships.
- “Funk This Up” – A punk-pop club banger with a killer hook and barely-contained chaos.
- “Clutter” – Emotional clutter meets sonic overload in this frantic, standout track.
- “The Conjuring” – Gothic, glitchy, and totally irresistible.
Final Thoughts: One of 2025’s Most Exciting Debuts
Jessica Winter didn’t just make an album — she made a scene. My First Album doesn’t ask for attention, it demands it, shaking your shoulders with glittery hands. It’s not perfect. It’s better than that — it’s real, it’s strange, and it’s bursting with artistic freedom.
In a world where so much pop feels algorithmically engineered, Jessica Winter’s chaos is a breath of fresh (and slightly dangerous) air. She’s not trying to be likable — and that’s exactly why we love her.
🏆 Exposed Vocals Verdict: 7.5/10
Jessica Winter is the kind of artist Fresh Finds was made for: bold, genre-irreverent, and on the verge of breaking big — but only on her own terms.
For fans of: Charli XCX, St. Vincent, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Robyn, Self Esteem
File under: Queer alt-pop, glitchy synth-punk, drama-core
Follow her now, so you can brag later.







