Spooky season, we know it well. The nights are drawing in earlier, the terrifying outfits are out in force, and if there’s an artist ready to grab that energy and run with it, it’s CATTY.
Just days on from the release of her Very Good new EP, ‘Bracing For Impact’, and everything that makes CATTY so essential is bubbling to the surface. Her surefire pop-rock brilliance has captured a fanbase who queue for hours before doors; tonight, the only thing scary is how ready for the big time CATTY is.
That excitement is front and centre when twst opens proceedings. With future-soaked pop that holds no prisoners, it’s a jaw-dropping statement of intent. Pushing the walls of Colours Hoxton as far as they’ll go, twst delivers euphoric highs and late-night clubland breakdowns through a soaring voice that stops everyone in their tracks. Glitchy and constantly evolving, that individuality rings true on tracks like ‘Catch Me (Beautiful Fall)’, twisting (twsting?) the unpredictable world of pop through a global, genre-bending lens. Performing with newfound confidence, twst’s next move feels certain to be as uncompromising as it is exciting.
If you want to know just how primed to be the next big thing CATTY is, you only need to witness the sheer noise Colours Hoxton makes when she takes the stage. The crashing ‘Bella Donna’ and the playful wink of ‘I Don’t Miss You (I Just Miss Your Mum)’ set the tone for a night that blends everything great pop stars do best: crafting anthems that feel larger than life while still reaching out like a best friend you can dance the night away with. ‘4am (Back In His Bed)’ goes off like a long-lost Robyn banger, while ‘I Dated A Monster’ lands as a menacing alt-pop knockout. Cuts from ‘Bracing For Impact’ show the breadth of where CATTY is heading into 2026 and beyond, with the towering ‘Man On The Run’ playing out like a golden-era ballad.
Returning for an encore with Lady Gaga’s ‘Paparazzi’, Night Of The Living Dork becomes even more unforgettable when CATTY tosses a ring to two fans in the front row, leading to a proposal soundtracked by ‘Make You Love Me’ (don’t worry, the answer was yes). As the swaggering ‘Joyride’ rounds out the night, CATTY proves this is more than just another Thursday in East London. If Night Of The Living Dork is our annual Halloween celebration, CATTY seizes it as her own – not just for herself, but for the ever-growing community orbiting around her.

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