Continuing their ascendant 2024, buzz-worthy post-punk outfitย HighSchoolย today unveil “She Took You To Narnia”, the final single to be previewed ahead of the release of their forthcoming second EP,ย Accelerator.

Outย April 19,ย Acceleratorย excitingly builds on the sound of their debut (Forever at Last) and should assert HighSchoolโs arrival from being one of indieโs best-kept secrets to far bigger things.
Following previous EP singles “August 19″ย and “Doesnโt Matter”, “She Took You To Narnia” once again proves HighSchoolโs skill for crafting sumptuous, emotionally poignant post-punk soundscapes that invite the listener to get lost in.
Beneath swirling, hypnagogic layers of twinkling riffs, hazily-rendered guitar chords, glitching electronics and a propulsive, melodic bass line, the track ruminates on the ironic turn of age: always desiring what is just out of reach – to grow older when youโre young and a return to childhood once youโre there.
Of the process behind the new single, the band share:ย โA subtle influence for โShe Took You To Narniaโ is โMirrorโs Imageโ by The Horrors.
We especially love the way it turns from being a four-to-the-floor electronic track to a more guitar-based band sound in the opening minute. We attempted to replicate this in our own way here.โ
The forthcoming release ofย Acceleratorย caps a prolific period for the band, having returned to Australia earlier this year for a pair of headline homecoming shows, followed by a sold-out, three-date Japanese run, a slew of officialย SXSW Austin 2024ย appearances, headline shows in Los Angeles and New York City respectively, and national USA tours supporting bothย Provokerย andย zzzahara.
Now approaching full circle, the band celebrate the release of their second EP and return to Europe and UK with a continent-spanning tour; full dates and details can be found below.
On the follow-up to their cult-classic 2021 debut EPย Forever At Last, the band deliver five tracks of emotionally charged, elliptical songwriting that conjures the tangible aura of their post-punk forebears as filtered through a lens of contemporary lo-fi bedroom pop.
Having spent the intervening years patiently polishing their sound across Melbourne and their adopted home of London,ย Acceleratorย poses as a seamless continuation of their debut EPโs arc. It finds HighSchool continuing to hone their combination of low-slung instrumentation and propulsive rhythm sections with hook-replete pop nous and evocative layers of spectral, saturnine atmosphere.
Listen to “She Took You To Narnia” HERE
Made up of Rory Trobbiani and Luke Scott, HighSchool create intoxicating music, whose debut 2021 EPย Forever At Lastย is a lo-fi gem of the genre.
Championed by the likes of NME, The FADER, CLASH, DIY, PAPER, Rolling Stone AU, The Line of Best Fit and So Young.
From Melbourne and relocating to London in 2022, HighSchool joined the likes of Wet Leg, CHVRCHES and NewDad on tour before playing a summer of UK festivals including All Points East, End of the Road, The Great Escape, Manchester Pysch Festival, Sea Change, Standon Calling and Visions. The autumn brought their first headline shows, both in the UK and across Europe, promoting not only their EP but also their anthemic track โOnly a Dreamโ, released as a limited 7โ on Dan Careyโs ever-great Speedy Wunderground label.
They ended the year touring back in Australia with Sam Fender, before playing their first headline hometown show at The Corner Hotel.
With Roryโs sister Lilli Trobbiani staying back to complete her studies, they returned to London to work on their second EP, basing themselves out of a practice space in Peckham.
Bridging the gap to their second EP was โColtโ, their most dancefloor-friendly track yet which had brilliant splaPIAS] Australia with the release of single โAugust 19โ late last year and continued the escapism theme of previous single โColtโ with a clip shot in Benidorm, the popular Spanish tourist destination known for its sandy beaches and trashy nightlife.
Following a fish-out-of-water protagonist on the bustling neon-lit streets, it showed the disparity between expectation and reality – a concept that runs throughout their second EP,ย Accelerator.