Joel X Eleanor
“I like dark and obsessive.” / “Deliberate — because I knew she’d like it.”
Joel X Eleanor are a London-based power alternative duo: Eleanor, a Hungarian-born contralto raised in Transylvania with a poet for a grandfather and a family steeped in literature; Joel, a Scouser who grew up in remote Myanmar without electricity and didn’t encounter pop music until he was eleven. Both autistic and intensely detail-driven, they spent three years building a cult following in London’s underground scene as Sweet Anna before stepping forward under their own names. Their double single “Garden Plot / Something Strange” is out now.
They answered our questions together — splitting them naturally, answering as one voice where it made sense and as two where it mattered. An album follows in autumn 2026.
“Now that we’ve been writing together for a few years, it is more of a shared language. Joel knows which tunes I’ll like the most, and we have a radar for phrases that are too twee or just plain silly. We’re ruthless — even if we had already put some work into it.”
— EleanorLoud, heavy, and mean meeting jazz chords and melodic instinct — the happy medium they found is the gap those two descriptions leave between them. Both tracks on the double single live in that exact space.
The willingness to scrap a song that already has work in it — to treat sunk cost as irrelevant if the result isn’t good enough — is rarer than it sounds. It’s also probably why the double single sounds as finished as it does.
Eleanor: “I like dark and obsessive.” Joel: “Deliberate — because I knew she’d like it.”
— On Joel’s production reframe of “Garden Plot”A whispered Attila József line as an Easter egg for Hungarian speakers — and a commitment to include Hungarian lyrics on every album. The multilingual texture isn’t decoration; it’s a structural part of who Eleanor is as a lyricist.
“I tried to make it so that another woman would be comfortable singing it to her own boyfriend. I think you always have to be thinking about that when you’re writing lyrics — would a total stranger be happy to sing this?”
— Joel on writing “Something Strange” for EleanorThe universality test — would a stranger be happy singing this? — is a more precise and useful framing for lyrical intimacy than most songwriting advice manages. It solves the oversharing problem not by pulling back but by writing toward something true enough to be shared.
An aluminium cone Christmas tree used as percussion. A whispered Attila József line as a secret for Hungarian ears. A universality test for intimate lyrics. A duo built in a grandmother’s house in Birkenhead and an AirBnB in Derby. The album in the fall will tell us what all of that adds up to — and “you’ll see” is exactly the right thing to say about it.






