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Heartbreak and London Nights: Patience Please and Madelaine

today23/01/2026 112

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Patience Please Madelaine

Patience Please: A Band With a View

This is the band I’ve been waiting for. I pressed play and honesty showed up straight away. Patience Please, the West London trio, take a turn inward on Madelaine. That choice makes sense coming from a band shaped by live work and persistence.

The track opens the door to their upcoming debut EP, scheduled for February 2026. I’m all in, senses booked in, watching emotion take the lead and do the driving.

Patience Please Madelaine
Patience Please – Photo credit: Ellie Whitbread

Guard Down In Front of Emotion

Madelaine grew from a rare pause, rather than momentum. The band allow space here, and that decision shapes the entire experience. The song opens in a restrained place, almost cautious. Rhythm guitar sets the frame first, then, as the writing stretches out and gets braver, string touches enter and steer the track toward its closing release.

I appreciate restraint when it serves a purpose, and here it does. The arrangement follows the words. Ollie Palmer’s vocal is close to the ear and emotionally open, shaped by the confusion and intensity of a first heartbreak. He lets hope and despair fight against each other, and that friction gives the song its weight. I caught myself replaying certain lines, and that’s usually my sign a song works.

The band also released a video for Madelaine. Restrained colour, physical tension, and a cinematic sense of space, giving the song a strong visual counterpart. It looks good, sure, but more importantly, it holds your attention.

I kept coming back to this image of a man in a paper boat, drifting through heavy water and darker skies. A kick in the middle of it all. It’s worth your time watching it.

From Loud Rooms to Quiet Confessions

Patience Please built their reputation the old-school way: live shows, word of mouth, and trust in their material. Fronted by Palmer, with Arthur Marriott on lead guitar and Tommy Lane on drums, the trio managed to bond over volume and conviction.

They cut their teeth across London venues, moving quickly from friend-filled rooms to sold-out nights at places like The Troubadour and Dingwalls 2. That background matters here, because Madelaine stays with the feeling and lets it unfold on its own terms. I like that choice.

Patience Please Madelaine
Patience Please – Photo credit: Ellie Whitbread

Momentum Building Toward 2026

Four singles in, over 35,000 organic Spotify streams, and support from BBC Introducing and Radio 2, Patience Please continue to gather pace without losing their footing. An extensive UK tour already lines up for 2026, setting the stage for their six-track debut EP, due February 27th.

For me, it reads as a band comfortable to slow down and say it loud and real. That confidence often separates a promising act from one that lasts. I’ll keep an eye on where this EP goes, and I suggest you do the same – follow Patience Please on Instagram, Spotify, and their official website and stay close to what they’re building.



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Written by: Flav


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