Some remixes flatten a song. The Ryder Remix of Erin Bloomer’s Coco Rouge does the opposite — it takes what was already a sharp, hook-driven pop cut and drives it straight onto the floor. The result is the kind of track that earns its chart position honestly: it hits immediately, it builds without overstaying, and it leaves the room wanting more. Reaching #8 in the UK Insta Club Charts, it isn’t hard to understand why this one still ignites live shows long after its release.
What makes the remix work is its restraint. Bloomer’s vocal is given space to do what it does best — deliver a hook with enough edge that it doesn’t dissolve into the production around it. The arrangement builds pressure without burying the melody, which is a harder balance to strike than most club-oriented remixes manage. This is a song that sounds as good through headphones as it does through a sound system, and that versatility is exactly what separates a lasting track from a moment.
Coco Rouge (Ryder Remix) reached #8 in the UK Insta Club Charts and remains a certified crowd-floor filler — still igniting live shows today. That kind of staying power doesn’t come from a formula. It comes from a track that was built well enough to outlast the moment it was released into.
Erin Bloomer is a half-Irish, half-English indie-pop artist operating out of London and Kent, and she is at a point in her career where the momentum is undeniable. With 125,000 monthly Spotify listeners, a sold-out London headline show in October 2025, and support slots for N-Dubz and Wes Nelson, she has built the kind of fanbase that fills rooms — not because of algorithmic luck, but because of consistent, emotionally intelligent songwriting delivered with the conviction of someone who means every word.
Her breakout single F U & F Her Too continues to grow across platforms, and her catalogue has accumulated millions of plays from a loyal audience that expands with every release. But perhaps the most significant marker of where Bloomer sits right now is the Virgin/EMI placement — selected to vocal the Rasster/Imanbek remix of “SAD,” a track that has now surpassed 90 million Spotify streams. That is not an emerging artist credit. That is proof that people at the top of the industry are paying attention.
BBC Radio 1, BBC Introducing Kent, and BBC News South East Today have all taken notice. The South East has a habit of producing artists who break nationally and internationally once the infrastructure around them catches up to the talent. Erin Bloomer feels like she’s at exactly that threshold.
The measure of any pop artist is ultimately what happens when the backing track drops and the lights come up. A sold-out London headline show in October 2025, combined with support slots for N-Dubz and Wes Nelson, tells you something about Bloomer’s ability to perform in environments where the room isn’t already on your side. Support slots are a different animal than headlining. You’re playing to an audience that came for someone else. Winning them over requires a level of stage presence and song quality that shortcuts don’t provide.
Bloomer has both. Her reputation for high-energy, full-band performance isn’t marketing language — it’s what comes through in the live footage, in the fan response, and in the fact that a club track released in 2025 is still, by all accounts, igniting rooms. That’s the sign of a live artist rather than a studio one, and in 2025, live is where careers are actually built.
Erin Bloomer is not an artist you discover — she’s an artist you realize you should have been paying attention to already. The catalogue is strong. The live show is proven. The industry cosigns are real. And Coco Rouge (Ryder Remix) is the kind of track that earns its place on a playlist and stays there.
Follow her. Stream it. Remember the name. The South East’s most exciting emerging artist title is one that tends to expire when the national breakthrough happens — and that moment feels close.







