Stories about: music
Alice Vyvyan-Jones spoke to LA-based artist Swsh about safe spaces, queer creative communities, and making work through identity, desire and growing confidence.

Archer Asks: DJ Estée Louder on dancefloor politics, dyke history and dark club sounds
DJ Estée Louder chats to Archer Magazine about dancefloor politics, queer electronica spaces and dyke history.
For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we chat to legendary musician Kaiit about culture, fashion and the importance of caring (lots!).
For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we chat to fashionista Slam Ross about SLAMROSS100, her underground-inspired streetwear label and multi-dimensional art practice.

Archer Asks: The Beaches on Aries rage, ‘Silver Springs’ and making music out of breakup gossip
Archer Magazine chatted to The Beaches about their new single with G Flip, about rage in music and queer visibility.
Archer Magazine talks to Courtney Barnett about her new album ‘Creature of Habit’, listening to signs from the universe, and ‘Shark Tank’.

Archer Asks: Wet Leg’s Rhian Teasdale on queer yearning, feral lyrics and ‘Jennifer’s Body’
Ahead of their tour dates in so-called Australia, we chatted to Wet Leg’s Rhian Teasdale about queer yearning, feral lyrics and eggs.

The most read pieces of 2025: Gloryholes, horse girls, neurodivergence and Palestinian legacies
From sex work to straight boy crushes, neurodivergence to Palestinian literature, here are Archer Magazine’s most read online pieces of 2025.
Once I started taking testosterone, I made an album that documented the way my voice changed.
For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we chat to superstar musician and DJ Fresh Hex.
“Fish felt like an apt metaphor for my own experience with being alive, for my relationship with my mum, for being queer.” Montaigne chats to Alex Creece.
For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we’re featuring multi-hyphenate queer artist Kira Puru.

The most read pieces of 2024: Palestinian liberation, dyke erotica and disabled pleasure
From drag storytime to intersex solidarity to neuro-inclusive spaces, here are Archer Magazine’s most read online pieces of 2024.
“I really leaned into that vibe when writing this record – gritty, grungy and grimy.” total tommy chats to Archer Magazine.
“It’s okay to not always feel like you have the reins when you’re making decisions in your life.” mxmtoon chats to Archer Magazine.
“I wouldn’t be half the artist I am today if I hadn’t lost everything before it.” Magnets, aka Siobhan McGinnity, chats to Alex Creece.
In 1993, my mum recorded an album, Sung in my Lover’s Bedroom, a collection of tracks that were explicit acts of feminist & lesbian activism.
“Everything that I make is a mirror, a reflection of my identity, because it comes from me.” Iniko chats to Archer Magazine about their music and upcoming tour.

The most read pieces of 2023: Queerplatonic love, neurodivergent art and trans music
From Jessica Rabbit to trans music to trash television, here are Archer Magazine’s most read online pieces of 2023.
Mo’Ju has amassed critical, commercial and cultural influence. Their latest album Oro, Plata, Mata was released in March 2023.
I grew up as two things: a closeted queer and a closeted Justin Bieber fan. Just like any other girl in my year seven English class, I was writing ‘JB’ over and over again in my notebooks with big love hearts. I couldn’t care less if Justin Bieber had a girlfriend, or if the paparazzi …
Cry Club are not interested in doing anything other than chasing joy. They refuse to limit themselves, or be reduced to one genre or box. It’s an inherently queer philosophy.



















