Overmono
Overmono is a British electronic music duo formed by brothers Tom Russell and Ed Russell, originating from rural South Wales and renowned for their innovative fusion of underground rave sounds with melodic pop elements.[1][2] The duo's roots trace back to their upbringing in a culturally isolated area of South Wales, where the brothers hosted underground parties to fuel their early passion for electronic music.[1] Prior to uniting as Overmono in 2015, Tom developed a solo career under the alias Truss, focusing on hard techno, while Ed pursued bass-heavy rave production as Tessela.[2] Frustrated by the constraints of their individual paths, they relocated to London and began collaborating, channeling their shared influences from UK rave culture into a cohesive project.[1][2] Overmono signed to XL Recordings ahead of their debut EP Arla in 2016, which marked their early sound. Their breakthrough came with a series of acclaimed EPs released between 2020 and 2022.[2][1] Their long-awaited debut album, Good Lies, released in May 2023, debuted at number 11 on the UK Albums Chart and received widespread critical praise for its blend of piercing techno drums, emotive hooks, and subtle experimentation.[1] Notable singles from the album and preceding releases include "So U Kno," named Resident Advisor’s Track of the Year in 2021, "Blow Out," "Freedoom 2," the 2024 collaboration "Gem Lingo (ovr now)" with Ruthven, and the 2025 single "If We Ever" with High Contrast.[1][2][3] The duo's live performances have elevated their profile, earning them the "Best Live Act" award at the DJ Mag Best of British Awards in 2021 and headline slots at major festivals such as Coachella in 2023, Glastonbury, and Primavera Sound, including headlining Glastonbury's West Holts stage in 2025.[1][4] Their 2024 Pure Devotion World Tour sold out rapidly, showcasing reimagined versions of their tracks and cementing their transition from underground innovators to mainstream electronic forces.[1][2] Overmono's style draws comparisons to pioneers like The Chemical Brothers and Burial, emphasizing a commitment to evolving rave history through unexpected samples and genre-blending production.[1]Members
Tom Russell
Tom Russell was born and raised in Overmonnow, a suburb of Monmouth in rural South Wales, alongside his younger brother Ed, with whom he shares Welsh roots. Growing up in a household steeped in music, Russell was exposed to classical influences through his father, a conductor and musician with over 30 years in the field. This environment, combined with occasional glimpses of rock acts like Oasis and Black Grape frequenting local spots near Rockfield Studios, shaped his early musical awareness but also sparked a rebellious turn toward electronic sounds.[5][6][7] As a teenager, Russell discovered rave music through old tapes around age 10 or 11, using it as a counterpoint to his classical upbringing; he created his first tracks with Dance eJay software obtained from a cereal box promotion. By the early 2010s, he launched his solo career under the alias Truss, specializing in hard techno characterized by aggressive rhythms and industrial edges. His breakthrough came with releases like the Osbasten EP on Perc Trax in 2010, followed by the Clytha EP on Our Circula Sound in 2012, which included the standout track "Beacon," and Ganymede on Perc Trax later that year. These works established Truss as a key figure in the UK's techno revival, emphasizing raw, club-focused production.[5][8][9] In 2013, Russell co-founded the Poly Kicks label with Ed, initially as an outlet for their individual projects, though his earliest Truss output predated it. By 2015, seeking to blend their styles, Russell transitioned from solo endeavors to deeper collaboration with his brother, formalizing their partnership as Overmono and marking the end of his primary focus on Truss.[10][2]Ed Russell
Ed Russell, the younger brother of Tom Russell, was born and raised in Overmonnow, a suburb of Monmouth in rural South Wales, before his family relocated frequently to places including Hampshire and Brighton, with much of his formative years spent in London.[6][11][12] His early interest in electronic music emerged around age eight, when he began eavesdropping on his brother's record mixing sessions, and deepened at age 11 when he received his first set of decks as a gift, sparking a passion for dance music.[13][12] Russell launched his solo career as Tessela in the early 2010s, drawing heavily from drum and bass and rave influences rooted in his teenage clubbing experiences at Brixton drum and bass parties and the Leeds dubstep scene.[12] His productions emphasized slamming broken beats, playful rhythmic swings, and mid-130s BPM tempos infused with rave stabs and hardcore energy, often evoking the pre-jungle era of early 1990s 'ardkore while avoiding direct modern jungle revivalism.[12][14] A standout early track, the 2013 single "Hackney Parrot," captured this style through cross-rhythmic breakbeats, squawking diva vocals, and B-more-inspired silliness, becoming a club staple played by DJs like Jackmaster and Pearson Sound.[12][14] In 2013, Russell founded the Poly Kicks label in Bath as an outlet for his own work and to support like-minded artists, with its debut release being his "Hackney Parrot" single, which included a remix by Special Request.[15][10] The label quickly established itself with early releases featuring Joy Orbison's contributions, such as tracks on the 50 Locked Grooves series, and Special Request's remix work, fostering a roster centered on club-focused 12-inch records blending UK electronic traditions.[16][17] Russell's Tessela catalog on Poly Kicks included notable EPs and singles that highlighted his evolving sound, such as the 2015 "Luv Mix," a test-pressing precursor to broader explorations in hedonistic, squelchy beats.[18] Later Poly Kicks releases under the alias, like the 2016 double-sided single "With Patsy / Swimming," featured warped rave elements and immersive basslines, while his 2013 "Nancy’s Pantry" EP on R&S Records delivered bombastic, genre-straddling tracks that amplified his reputation for high-energy dancefloor anthems.[19][14][18] Prior to collaborative projects, Russell's pre-Overmono experiments as Tessela focused on blending genres, merging proto-jungle hardcore with contemporary techno frameworks to create unpredictable, human-feeling rhythms through hardware improvisation and sampling.[14][12] This approach, seen in tracks like "Bottom Out" (2015, R&S Records), prioritized rave's mindless appeal and rhythmic innovation over strict genre boundaries, laying groundwork for his distinctive electronic voice.[18][14]Musical style and influences
Electronic influences
Overmono's sound is deeply rooted in the UK electronic traditions of the 1990s and 2010s, particularly drawing from drum and bass, hard techno, and rave culture, which informed their early productions and continue to shape their high-energy, bass-driven tracks.[20][21] The brothers' individual solo work—Tom under the alias Truss with his focus on hard techno, and Ed as Tessela exploring drum and bass and rave-inspired sounds—laid the groundwork for these influences, blending relentless rhythms and atmospheric textures that evoke the underground warehouse parties of the era.[2] Specific artists have played a pivotal role in their artistic development, including Burial's haunting, introspective dubstep and the euphoric big-beat electronica of The Chemical Brothers, positioning Overmono within a lineage of innovative British dance music acts.[1] Early works by Joy Orbison, with their warped garage and bass manipulations, also resonate strongly, as evidenced by their collaborative track "Bromley" and ongoing mutual admiration that has influenced Overmono's fusion of club-ready grooves with emotional depth.[22] These inspirations extend to post-dubstep elements from artists like Ramadanman and Zomby, contributing to the duo's sparse yet energetic aesthetic that prioritizes rhythmic propulsion over melody.[22] Growing up in the rural Welsh town of Monmouth, far from London's vibrant rave hubs, Tom and Ed Russell were shaped by a local music scene that emphasized DIY creativity and isolation-fueled experimentation, fostering their immersion in electronic sounds via online discovery and makeshift home setups.[23] This environment, combined with the Overmonnow suburb's quiet backdrop, amplified their draw to the escapist energy of UK underground electronic music, turning geographical distance into a catalyst for innovative reinterpretations of garage, techno, and breakbeat traditions.[6] Their father's background in conventional classical music further fueled this path, as the brothers turned to repetitive, abrasive electronic genres as a deliberate act of rebellion, rejecting structured instrumentation for the raw freedom of sampling and turntablism.[24][23] As Overmono, the duo has evolved these influences from their solo eras into a cohesive joint project, merging Tom's techno-edged minimalism with Ed's rave-infused basslines to create a sound that honors UK electronic heritage while pushing toward pop accessibility and global appeal.[25] This synthesis is evident in their ability to distill decades of rave history into concise, pounding tracks that capture both nostalgia and forward momentum, without being confined to any single subgenre.[26]Production approach
Overmono's production process centers on the manipulation of vocal samples to evoke melancholy, often sourcing them from 1980s and 1990s house and techno records, which are then pitch-shifted, chopped, and processed to create emotional depth and ambiguity. These samples are layered over tightly wound beat patterns featuring swing quantization at around 50-57% and tempos in the 130-140 BPM range, using elements like punchy kicks with lingering decay, short rim-shot snares, and filtered hi-hats placed on offbeats for a hypnotic, club-ready groove. Sidechain compression is frequently applied to duck percussive elements against the kick, ensuring rhythmic cohesion while maintaining a gritty, distorted texture that emphasizes character over polish.[27][28][29] The duo blends underground club sounds—such as breakbeats and programmed drums from multi-sample packs—with accessible hooks and pop structures, constructing tracks around verse-chorus frameworks that prioritize vocal-led melodies over extended builds. This approach layers rave and techno elements by combining classic Roland-inspired sounds (e.g., 505 hi-hats and 808 snares) with filtered noise textures and reverb for spatial depth, often obscuring original samples from ‘90s UK rave and Detroit techno vinyl to integrate them seamlessly into contemporary garage frameworks. Effects like EQ distortion and auto-filters are used to add sweepy, modulated noise, creating a balance between raw energy and emotional resonance.[30][31][29] In later productions, particularly for their debut album, Overmono shifted toward greater emphasis on melody and emotion, paring back percussive complexity to elemental drums while amplifying stadium-sized synth lines and vocal hooks for subconscious embedment. This evolution moved from heavy reliance on external sampling to building an internal library of original loops, synth progressions, and chord stabs, fostering a genre-agnostic sound that prioritizes poise and dance-floor appeal. Equipment preferences include hardware like the Elektron Octatrack for sampling and sequencing, Roland TR-8S for drum synthesis, and synthesizers such as the Korg Poly-800 and Virus C, often routed through an Allen & Heath mixer; software-wise, Ableton Live serves as the primary DAW for arrangement, with tools like Drum Rack and Simpler for beat construction and sample manipulation. Studio sessions incorporate live improvisation, as seen in early isolated writing retreats where hardware was used to experiment freely without rigid structures.[31][30][28][32][29]Career
Solo beginnings
Tom Russell, the elder brother, began his solo career in electronic music under the alias Truss in the late 2000s, but gained prominence in the early 2010s through releases on the Perc Trax label, known for its industrial techno sound. His early work featured intense, hardware-driven tracks, with key EPs such as the 2011 Osbasten EP, which showcased looping percussion and distorted rhythms influenced by UK rave traditions. Truss's productions, including tracks like "Beacon" and "WTTP," emphasized a raw, club-oriented techno style that resonated in London's underground venues.[5][33] Ed Russell, the younger sibling, entered the scene later, debuting as Tessela in 2013 with a remix of Tom's "Osbasten" during his university years. His solo output quickly stood out in the UK bass and breakbeat landscape, highlighted by the seminal single "Hackney Parrot," released that same year, which revived jungle elements with heavy breaks and vocal samples for dancefloor impact. Tessela's early EPs on labels like R&S Records further blended garage and hardcore influences, earning him a BBC Radio 1 residency.[5][34][15] The brothers' worlds converged through the founding of Poly Kicks in 2013, a London-based label initially launched by Ed to release "Hackney Parrot" but soon co-run by both, serving as a platform for their individual and shared explorations. This venture bridged their separate paths, allowing for the exchange of production techniques—Ed adopting Tom's rapid arrangement methods in Cubase, while Tom incorporated Ed's approaches to creative limitation and distortion. Prior to formal collaboration, these cross-influences were evident in subtle stylistic overlaps, such as shared sample libraries and mutual inspirations from '90s rave and techno.[15][5][33] By the mid-2010s, the vibrant UK underground electronic scene—marked by a resurgence in techno, jungle, and bass music at clubs and free parties—prompted the brothers to deepen their partnership, building on an initial 2012 joint track as TR\ER to channel the era's raw, diverse energy into more cohesive joint endeavors.[5][33]Formation and early EPs
Overmono, the project of brothers Tom Russell (aka Truss) and Ed Russell (aka Tessela), formed in 2015 as the siblings began jointly producing music, building on their individual electronic backgrounds. After completing early demos, the duo signed to XL Recordings, the British label pivotal in shaping underground electronic scenes since the 1990s. This partnership marked their entry into a major platform for experimental dance music, allowing them to refine a sound rooted in rave nostalgia and club functionality.[20][35] The duo's debut EP, Arla, arrived on July 29, 2016, via XL Recordings, introducing a raw fusion of '90s techno, rave basslines, and stuttering rhythms across five tracks. It was followed by sequels Arla II on March 10, 2017, and Arla III on November 24, 2017, completing a trilogy that drew directly from the brothers' recollections of UK rave culture, with melodic elements evoking big-room trance and underground warehouse energy. These releases established Overmono's signature: high-energy club tools with emotional depth, earning praise for their "widescreen flair" and seamless blend of rowdy 4/4 grooves and experimental textures, which resonated strongly in UK club environments like London's fabric and Manchester's Warehouse Project.[36][37][35][30] In 2018, Overmono expanded experimentally beyond the Arla series, releasing Raft Living on October 8 via Poly Kicks, Ed Russell's DIY imprint founded in 2013 as a platform for raw, independent electronic output. This three-track EP shifted toward breakbeat-driven hardcore and jungle influences at 130 BPM, with shimmering synths and deep bass, described as an "idyllic distillation" of their nostalgic sound that integrated readily into club sets. Later that year, on December 7, they issued Whities 019 through the Whities label, a three-track 12" exploring ambient techno and melodic dexterity, nodding to their rural Welsh rave origins with gentle drumming and evolving textures. These releases highlighted early label dynamics, balancing XL's broader reach for polished club anthems with Poly Kicks' intimate, experimental ethos, further solidifying their presence in the UK's underground scene.[38][39][40][41][42][43]Collaborations and breakthrough
Overmono's frequent collaborations with Joy Orbison, a prominent figure in UK electronic music, began to elevate their profile within the scene. In late 2019, the duo joined forces with Orbison under the alias Joy Overmono to release the double A-side single "Bromley / Still Moving" via XL Recordings, blending intricate percussion and atmospheric basslines that captured attention in underground circles.[44][45] This partnership marked their first joint output on a major label, highlighting a shared affinity for experimental club sounds. The collaboration resumed in September 2022 with "Blind Date," featuring American singer ABRA, which fused hazy vocals with driving rhythms and further solidified their creative synergy.[46][47] Parallel to these partnerships, Overmono achieved breakthroughs through a series of EPs that showcased their evolving production style. Their 2020 release Everything U Need on XL Recordings featured four tracks, including the titular opener and "Clipper (Another 5 Years)," emphasizing raw techno grooves and minimalistic arrangements that earned praise for their direct, dancefloor-oriented energy.[7][48] This was followed in April 2022 by Cash Romantic, another XL EP with five cuts like "Gunk" and "Phosycon," which incorporated breakbeat and ambient textures to explore more nuanced electronic palettes.[49][50] These releases demonstrated Overmono's ability to balance club accessibility with experimental depth, drawing wider interest from electronic listeners. A pivotal moment arrived in July 2021 with fabric presents Overmono, a renowned mix compilation for the influential London club night series, featuring eight original tracks spanning breakbeat, techno, and house.[51] Cut by mastering engineer Matt Colton and pressed on double vinyl, the mix highlighted their curatorial skills and genre-spanning versatility, positioning them as key tastemakers in the UK dance scene.[52] That same year, Overmono received the Best Live Act award at DJ Mag's Best of British Awards, voted by readers for their explosive custom audio-visual sets that propelled them from niche venues to larger platforms.[53][33] These developments fueled Overmono's growing international buzz in electronic music communities between 2019 and 2022, with critical acclaim from Pitchfork and features in DJ Mag underscoring their shift toward mainstream recognition.[49][33] Performances at European festivals like Dekmantel in 2022 and endorsements from outlets such as Mixmag amplified their presence, attracting global audiences attuned to innovative UK bass and rave influences.[54][47]Debut album and recent developments
Overmono's debut studio album, Good Lies, was released on May 12, 2023, via XL Recordings.[55] The album received widespread critical acclaim, earning a Metascore of 83 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 9 reviews, with praise for its euphoric electronic sound and genre-blending production.[55] It debuted and peaked at number 11 on the UK Albums Chart, marking their first entry in the top 20.[56] The release coincided with their North American debut performance at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in April 2023, where they played on the Gobi Stage across both weekends.[57] In 2025, Overmono continued their momentum with the collaborative single "Lippy," released on June 23 via XL Recordings in partnership with Joy Orbison and featuring vocals from Skiifall.[58] The track, produced under their joint alias Joy Overmono, blends UK garage elements with introspective lyrics, premiering as the Hottest Record on BBC Radio 1.[59] This followed a series of high-profile festival appearances, including headlining Glastonbury Festival's West Holts Stage on June 29, where they delivered a futuristic dance set broadcast by the BBC.[60] They also headlined Boomtown Fair's main stage on August 9, sharing the bill with acts like Maribou State and Nia Archives.[61] Additionally, Overmono co-headlined Belfast's AVA Festival on May 31 alongside Underworld, closing out the event with a performance highlighting tracks from Good Lies.[62] Through their ongoing partnership with XL Recordings, Overmono have teased further projects, including remixes debuted during live sets, such as a rework of High Contrast's "If We Ever" at Glastonbury, which was officially released on August 26, 2025.[63][64] Their 2025 activities, including a major takeover of Manchester's The Warehouse Project in October and a headline show at London's Alexandra Palace in November, signal continued expansion of their live and studio output.[65][66]Discography
Studio albums
Overmono's debut studio album, Good Lies, was released on May 12, 2023, through XL Recordings. The 13-track project serves as a distillation of the duo's musical evolution, incorporating multi-genre electronic elements such as garage, techno, and chopped-up vocals to create a cohesive narrative that reflects their collaborative journey. Drawing from their earlier EPs, it builds on themes of melody and emotion, blending euphoric dance-floor energy with nostalgic, heartfelt samples that evoke brotherhood and childhood sweetness.[55][67] The album opens with introspective tracks like "Feelings Plain" and "Arla Fearn," which establish a dreamy, atmospheric tone through warped vocal manipulations and subtle basslines, before escalating into high-energy cuts such as "Good Lies" and "Is U," featuring four-on-the-floor beats and pitch-shifted R&B samples for an ecstatic, pop-leaning drive.[68] Mid-album highlights include the collaborative "Walk Thru Water" with St. Panther, which infuses liquid synths and emotional depth, and "Cold Blooded," a pounding techno-infused piece that highlights the brothers' fusion of Tom's harder edges with Ed's drum and bass influences. Closing with "Calling Out," the record maintains a balance of urgency and tranquility, using production techniques like sped-up vocals and acidic accents to convey a "letter of love to the journey so far."[26] Overall, the tracklist emphasizes conceptual flow over isolated bangers, with runtime spanning approximately 48 minutes.[69] Critically, Good Lies received universal acclaim, earning a Metacritic score of 83 out of 100 based on nine reviews, praised for its innovative blend of emotional ambushes, catchy melodies, and danceable innovation that solidifies Overmono's position in the electronic scene.[55] Reviewers highlighted its masterful distillation of UK rave history, with euphoric highs and human warmth setting it apart from functional club fare.[26][68] Commercially, it debuted at number 11 on the UK Albums Chart.[56] As of November 2025, no additional studio albums have been released or announced.[70]Extended plays
Overmono's extended plays represent a series of experimental releases that trace the duo's evolution from glitchy, rave-influenced electronica to more emotive and genre-blending productions, beginning with their debut on XL Recordings in 2016. These EPs served as platforms for sonic iteration, often incorporating breakbeats, IDM elements, and nostalgic UK bass influences, while showcasing the brothers' dexterity in melody and texture.[37][71] The Arla trilogy, released between 2016 and 2017 on XL Recordings, marked Overmono's entry into major label territory and established their signature style of shadowy mid-90s rave mutations fused with eerie IDM. Arla I (July 29, 2016) opens with rowdier tracks like "Olchon Flows," featuring diva samples over grumbling Reese bass, and progresses to more introspective pieces such as "Winged," blending breakbeats with emotional melodic twists.[36][35] Arla II (March 10, 2017) builds on this foundation with six tracks informed by 90s IDM, highlighted by "O-Coast" and its atmospheric closer "Powder Dry," which evokes lush organ vibrations.[72][71] Arla III (November 24, 2017) concludes the series with four glitchy, emotive electronica cuts, including drum'n'bass breaks and AFX-like loopiness in tracks like "HR3," solidifying their emotive electronic palette.[73][37] In 2018, Raft Living (October 5, 2018) on the duo's Poly Kicks imprint shifted toward breakbeat techno and jungle influences, with "Daisy Chain" delivering infectious breaks topped by effervescent chords, "The Mabe" offering a mind-bending 130 BPM hardcore-jungle anthem, and the title track providing a graceful sequenced synthesizer closer.[74][41] Later that year, Whities 019 (December 7, 2018) on AD 93 explored varying styles with impressive melodic and textural range, featuring breakbeat-infused techno on "iii's Front" for a jungle-tinged drive, spiraling keyboards in "Quadraluv," and the emotive "Yell0w_Tail."[42][75] Everything U Need (November 6, 2020) on XL Recordings amplified the duo's latent melancholy through a British pastoral electronica lens, with the title track luxuriating in wistful synths, "Aero" evoking airy introspection, and "Clipper (Another 5 Years)" nodding to nostalgic rave revivals.[48][7] Finally, Cash Romantic (April 8, 2022) on XL introduced drum'n'bass elements alongside UK garage and techno, evolving their sound with slinky rave grooves; standout tracks include "Gunk" with its industrial 2-step energy, "Gfortune" sampling distorted vocals over mechanized beats, and "Cash Romantic" delivering sharp DnB basslines.[76][49]Singles
Overmono have released a series of standalone singles and collaborative tracks since 2019, often as double A-sides or digital releases that showcase their evolving blend of UK garage, 2-step, and future bass influences. These singles frequently serve as precursors to EPs or albums, building anticipation through high-energy productions and notable guest features. From early collaborations with Joy Orbison to recent high-profile team-ups with artists like Fred again.. and The Streets, the duo's singles have garnered attention for their club-ready sound and occasional chart impact, with releases primarily on XL Recordings and their own Poly Kicks imprint. The following table enumerates key singles from 2019 to 2025, including release dates, labels, and brief notes on reception or promotional role:| Title | Release Date | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Le Tigre / Salt Mix (POLY011) | November 1, 2019 | Poly Kicks | Debut standalone release under Overmono's name; raw techno-breakbeat hybrid that established their Poly Kicks output and gained traction in underground DJ sets.[77] |
| Bromley / Still Moving (with Joy Orbison as Joy Overmono) | November 22, 2019 | XL Recordings | First XL collaboration; "Bromley" praised for its tense, warehouse-ready energy, marking Overmono's entry into major label releases and promoting their joint alias.[16] |
| Everything U Need | November 6, 2020 | XL Recordings | Lead single from the EP of the same name; euphoric garage track that highlighted their maturing production, receiving acclaim for its emotional depth in electronic press.[78] |
| Pieces of 8 / Echo Rush | April 9, 2021 | XL Recordings | Double A-side emphasizing breakbeat experimentation; "Pieces of 8" noted for its driving rhythm, bridging their early sound to more polished club fare.[79] |
| If U Ever | May 12, 2021 | fabric Records | Preview single for the fabric presents Overmono mix; dreamy 2-step cut that underscored their DJ credentials and was lauded for seamless genre fusion.[80] |
| BMW Track / So U Kno | June 16, 2021 | Poly Kicks | Self-released double A-side; "So U Kno" featured pitched vocals and became a staple in sets, later reissued on XL to promote wider exposure.[81] |
| Diamond Cut / Bby | November 19, 2021 | XL Recordings | Atmospheric double single; tracks like "Bby" received praise for lush, R&B-infused textures, signaling a shift toward album-oriented material.[82] |
| Blind Date (with Joy Orbison, feat. ABRA) | September 23, 2022 | XL Recordings | Second Joy Overmono collaboration; vocal-driven track with ABRA's sample, celebrated for its seductive vibe and tour promotion.[83] |
| Walk Thru Water (feat. St. Panther) | November 17, 2022 | XL Recordings | First single from debut album Good Lies; sample-heavy garage anthem that built hype for the LP with its euphoric build-ups.[84] |
| Is U | January 18, 2023 | XL Recordings | Album lead single for Good Lies; Tirzah-sampling track praised for its innovative sampling and emotional resonance in reviews.[85] |
| Calling Out | February 22, 2023 | XL Recordings | Third single from Good Lies; emotive track praised for its balance of urgency and tranquility, using sped-up vocals and acidic accents.[86] |
| Good Lies | March 31, 2023 | XL Recordings | Title track and final pre-album single; introspective closer that encapsulated the LP's themes, gaining positive nods for its narrative closure.[87] |
| Freedom 2 (with Kwengface & Joy Orbison) | July 27, 2023 | Kwengface LTD | Remix collaboration as a standalone; grime-infused rework that expanded Overmono's reach into UK rap scenes.[88] |
| Blow Out | September 7, 2023 | XL Recordings | Post-album standalone; explosive club banger lauded for high-energy drops, maintaining momentum after Good Lies.[89] |
| stayinit (with Fred again.. & Lil Yachty) | February 28, 2024 | Atlantic Records UK | High-profile crossover; peaked at #53 on UK charts, blending future garage with hip-hop for broad appeal.[90] |
| Turn The Page (with The Streets) | April 24, 2024 | XL Recordings | Rework of The Streets' classic; etched vinyl single that revived 2-step nostalgia and was a festival highlight.[91] |
| Gem Lingo (ovr now) (feat. Ruthven) | July 17, 2024 | XL Recordings | Jazzy, bass-heavy track; premiered in live sets, noted for its playful energy and Ruthven's soulful contribution.[92] |