Simply find the best possible online shopping Hot Milk deals
Shop Hot Milk products and compare prices and listings on popular online marketplaces.

Hot Milk's debut album has been a long time coming. After a trilogy of EPs and endless successes both on stage and off, the Manchester duo almost deserve a record that reflects their power, and A Call To The Void is almost just that.
Renowned for their catchy choruses and stunning production, A Call To The Void is the most Hot Milk product they have ever released.
Once again, their emo party anthems are easily boppable, with Party on my Deathbed and Horror Show filling the hole that Candy Coated Lie$ first opened.
Likewise, Zoned Out is a stunner that deserves your attention on its third and fourth listens.
Han Mee's voice, particularly, is spectacular throughout the entire 11-track record. She consistently and frequently shows off just how talented she is in nuanced ways. From raucous, powerful choruses (Bloodstream) and delicate verses (Forget Me Not), she is a force to be reckoned with, reminiscent of such powerhouses as Brendan Yates. (And stick around for that utterly brutal verse in Migraine, you'll…
When Ingrid (Vicky Krieps) glides up to Sofia (Emma Mackey) on horseback like a manic-pixie mirage, Sofia immediately allured, or when Ingrid tells Sofia, “Do you have cigarettes? OK, let’s go,” even though they’ve just met, you want to believe they’re riding on some hidden code of desire, psychically linked strangers sun-baking on the Iberian peninsula of Spain. Ingrid, a German expat styled in a flowy headscarf like a breezy lesbian pirate or swashbuckling bar wench, is such a void of a woman in Rebecca Lenkiewicz’s directorial debut “Hot Milk” that this study of sapphic malaise along the Mediterranean becomes oddly sizzle-less.
Adapting Deborah Levy’s 2016 novel, whose title unsubtly conjures images of breastfeeding among other bodily activities related to reproduction, the “She Said” and “Disobedience” screenwriter casts Mackey and Krieps as lovers among the ruins of Fiona Shaw’s distress. The great Irish actress plays Rose, Sofia’s mother, who has schlepped her daughter to the coastal town of Almería, Spain, to locate a cure for Rose’s mysterious bone disease, which has left her unable to walk since Sofia (now in her mid-twenties) was four. Or has it, and is Rose faking it?
More from IndieWire
…
It’s been another big year for Hot Milk, and the duo are already looking ahead to making 2023 just as massive with two headline shows in February.
The pair of dates – at London’s KOKO and the O2 Ritz Manchester – will be their biggest so far, and will see them joined by As December Falls, Jools and Clarence.
Say the band: “England’s Screaming will be our biggest headline shows to date. As the country screams under the misery of the current times we need to come together and defend individuality more than ever.
“With these shows it’s time to let go together and celebrate the first three Hot Milk EPs, these shows represent a bookend to the three EPs that started this band as we move towards the long-awaited debut album. Expect a fuckin show.”
Tickets go on sale this Thursday, October 13, at 10am.
Catch Hot Milk at the following:
February
2 London KOKO
3 Manchester O2 Ritz