Shattered Trust and Stadium-Sized Sound: SANSOM’s “Call Me” Hits Hard
Brighton-based rock artist SANSOM is swinging for the emotional fences with Call Me, and no surprises here, he knocks it out of the park. This high-octane anthem pulses with raw feeling, fusing personal pain with blistering energy in a way that feels both intimate and arena-ready.
Recorded at Brighton Electric and mastered at the legendary Abbey Road, Call Me is a powerhouse blend of grunge-tinged grit and polished production. Think the bruised confidence of Royal Blood colliding with the sheer urgency of Queens of the Stone Age. It’s heavy, it’s urgent, and it never lets you look away. From the first kick of drums, SANSOM wastes no time setting the emotional stakes high and keeping them there.
The song doesn’t just play loud, it feels loud. You can hear the cracks in his voice, the turmoil behind the riffs, the controlled chaos that comes from trying to hold it together after betrayal. And yet, it never slips into despair. There’s defiance in the distortion, clarity in the noise.
It’s no wonder Call Me earned a spot on BBC Introducing and a place in the Alternative Great Escape lineup. This isn’t just a track, it’s a statement. SANSOM isn’t afraid to be vulnerable, and that bravery bleeds through every chord. With Call Me, he’s not just asking to be heard—he’s demanding it.