MusicNewsKing Krule teases new music with ‘Bermondsey Bosom’ videoArchy Marshall makes a long-awaited, brief returnShareLink copied ✔️August 22, 2017MusicNewsTextAnna Cafolla After months of playing unknown songs at festivals and forthcoming album rumours, King Krule has released a teaser for new music. The minute-long video, titled “Bermondsey Bosom”, features a series of short, hazy clips – we see cyclists, leafy streets, and Archy Marshall releases a balloon into the sky. As an instrumental plays, the words from a cryptic poster sent to fans recently are read out in Spanish. It translates as, per the video credit: “Slipping into filth, lonely but surrounded. A new place to drown, 6 feet beneath the moon. He arose a blood sucker, painting black and blue objects with projections of himself. It was always about himself. He jerks inside, his guts twist, sits in the Big Smoke and thinks of her.... Me and you against this city of parasites, Parasite Paradise Parasite Paradise.” The text references two of his previous albums, A New Place to Drown (released under his given name in 2015) and 6 Feet Beneath the Moon (his 2013 debut). The video is credited to Reuben Bastienne-Lewis. Recently, the musician, who works under multiple names, collaborated with Mount Kimbie on “Blue Train Lines”. An upcoming interview with Pitchfork sees Marshall detail working with Frank Ocean. Rumours had been swirling since Ocean floated the thought of a collaboration on a past interview. “Frank was at my house, yeah,” Marshall says. “His work rate’s crazy; he creates album after album. I don’t know what goes through his head. He’s a different kind of cat. He came down and he wanted me to do something for his record, but I don’t think he liked it.” Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe 30 best K-pop tracks of 2025‘UK Ug’: How Gen Z Brits reinvented rap in 2025 How a century-old Danish brand became pop culture’s favourite sound systemDHLInside singer Sigrid’s intimate walks through nature with her fans ‘The unknown is exciting’: Why Gorillaz’ upcoming album is all about deathThe 20 best tracks of 2025, rankedThe 20 best albums of 2025, rankedThe renaissance of Zara Larsson: ‘I’m out of the Khia Asylum’The 10 best music videos of 2025, rankedListen to our shadowy Dazed Winter 2025 playlist7 of Chase Infiniti’s favourite K-pop tracksMeet The Deep, K-pop’s antihero