bleech 9:3
When Bleech 9:3 songwriters/guitarists Barry Quinlan and Sam Duffy first crossed paths in their early twenties, it almost seemed inconceivable that they hadn’t met before. Throughout their tumultuous teenage years spent gigging in various projects around Dublin, they’d lived near-parallel lives mired by the chaos-purgatory spiral of addiction; like two shadows cast by the same light but never touching.
In the throes of the early stages of recovery – when a better life still felt elusive and intangible, something to be hoped for, though not necessarily to be believed in – Barry and Sam were introduced to each other at a 12-step rehab programme. Barry soon signed up to be his new friend’s sponsor and take him through the process, and felt energised by the similarities in their ambitions and worldview.
“I think to find someone your own age, with the same dreams as you, from the same city and is also suffering from the same thing… we knew immediately that we could help each other,” recalls Sam. “You can lose your mind thinking about how rare that is.”
However unsteady their respective circumstances may have been at the time, a brighter, more creative future suddenly came into focus. In between “secret” writing sessions the foundations of Bleech 9:3 were born, giving Barry and Sam purpose to move forward. “From the point of view of recovery and sobriety, we shared an intrinsic understanding of each other. It felt like we were building something very, very special,” says Barry.
Three years on from Barry and Sam’s chance meeting, and Bleech 9:3 are on the crest of a wave. Completed by James Quinlan (bass) and Luke O’Neill (drums), the band are one of the most in-demand new live acts on the circuit, after a storming 2025 saw them open up for Keo and Shame alongside booking sold-out headline shows. They became a word-of-mouth wonder in a matter of months, earning early acclaim from press and radio, before the year culminated in an electrifying three-night residency at London’s Blue Basement.
With only a handful of singles to their name, Bleech 9:3 have established a sound that’s as evocative as it is crunchy and in-your-face, deftly gliding between sharp, irrepressible melodies and heavy blasts of distortion whenever the mood demands. They draw from a shared adoration of seminal acts like Radiohead, Deftones and Nirvana, as well as more contemporary names like Fontaines D.C. and Sleep Token.
Breakthrough single ‘Jacky’, an unflinching portrait of addiction’s destructive nature and the people trapped within it, boldly encapsulates what makes Bleech 9:3 such a formidable new force. Its full-blooded chorus sculpts the thunder and grime of its subject matter into something that feels near-transcendental, while the track arrived accompanied by a music video inspired by Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal. That the band count the late Swedish director and David Lynch as key influences, alongside the aesthetics of arthouse classics like Paris, Texas and Blade Runner, only speaks to the breadth of their shared artistic vision.
“We want to be able to live and speak the music,” explains James, who studied Art History and Philosophy at college. “We love and take inspiration from rock bands, but it’s also crucial for us to look elsewhere.”
The juxtaposition of confidence and introspection is never in such stark relief as when one makes a life-changing decision, which may explain how a relocation to London encouraged the band to look outwards. Sam and Barry made the move in summer 2024, finding a sense of community with the Irish diaspora in the city, while Brixton soon became the nexus of their day-to-day: it’s where they would rehearse, watch and meet other bands at famed post-punk haunt The Windmill, and where the pair began work on Bleech 9:3 demos.
One of the first tracks that they penned together was ‘Ceiling’, which became the band’s blistering debut single. Written about the loss of a friend from his recovery journey, Barry describes it as “the beginning of a new page”, carrying the feeling of a young, headstrong songwriter reaching toward clarity. “I've captured the most painful situations through being able to access my own truth,” he explains. “Recovery and living the right way go hand in hand. It's a balance that’s inseparable from feeling like my creativity is in a good place.”
Sam concurs: “My world has opened up so much more. I couldn't be doing any of this if I was still using or drinking because my life would be a shitshow,” he says. I wouldn't be responsible enough to live in a different country and to show up to band practice; I wouldn't be consistent enough to bring good ideas to the table. It's like the clicky part of the pen, my sobriety: all the other things are there in me, but they don’t work without the sobriety.”
As the Bleech 9:3 project began to take shape, Barry and Sam posed an ultimatum to James and Luke, who were still based in Dublin: either move to London or leave the band entirely. The pair packed their bags and made the jump at the start of 2025; it was a clear sign of the faith they had in the direction of Bleech 9:3, unlike anything they’d experienced in previous musical projects. The band’s future depended on their willingness to fully commit.
By the summer, the band began roadtesting material at subterranean venues across the city “playing to fucking nobody”, as Barry puts it, pouring themselves into each show. Yet every night was a test of endurance: they gigged relentlessly and headed out to shows several nights a week, meeting promoters along the way. For the band, it was when a management deal came calling, that their dream, once fragile and uncertain, was now real.
It was tenacity and musical integrity, above all else, that kept the band on the right path. “I owe a lot to Barry and Sam for kicking our arses out the door,” explains James, describing how it felt to leave Dublin behind. He compares the journey to a storyline of The Hobbit, in which the character Gandalf encourages Bilbo Baggins to “go and experience life” by having adventures outside his comfort zone.
“Being part of this band has meant the world to everyone involved,” says Luke. “There’s a real desire to care about artistry, and to want to constantly get better at our craft. It’s been about not stopping at the first barrier: we had to push through to find ourselves.”
Following the release of new single ‘Cannonball’, Bleech 9:3 stand on the edge of something momentous. Fresh material is in the works and a devoted fanbase continues to surge, while a run of over 150 live dates looms large. The road ahead might be rich with possibility – but the band’s existence alone is proof that from the ashes, something fearless can be reborn.