Sweet Unrest are done being polite. 'All The Same (La Di Da)' is a breakneck anti-romance that pulls no punches — fizzing guitars, punching drums, and Jack River's raspy vocals delivering a scathing takedown with a grin on its face.
The London five-piece have form for this kind of thing. Their sound sits somewhere in the overlap between 90s Britpop grit and fuzzier alt-rock — less polished than their more tender previous work, more interested in friction. Producer Luke Burgoyne, whose credits stretch from The Libertines to Declan McKenna, clearly understood the assignment: the guitars bite, the drums hit with intent, and the whole thing moves like it has somewhere to be.
What keeps it from being a straightforward kiss-off is the twist — by the bridge, the pointed finger turns back on itself. The narrator admits they're probably just as bad. It's a small moment, but it gives the track more dimension than a pure diss track would have, and the self-awareness lands without deflating the energy.
Fresh off a US run taking in SXSW, LA and The New Colossus Festival in New York, Sweet Unrest are clearly moving with some purpose in 2026. More singles are due through the year.
'All The Same (La Di Da)' is out now, stream in the player below.








