BROCKHOFF returns with Front Row, the fifth single from debut album Easy Peeler, out June 5 via [PIAS] Recordings Germany.
Gentle but exposed, the track turns live performance into pressure: spotlight, crowd, trembling hands, and one face that could change everything…“If I ever saw you in the front row / My fingers trembling / Oh I might never finish this song”.

BROCKHOFF shares:
To me, Front Row is a song full of excitement and fear, both feelings I experience a lot while being on tour. It’s about this childhood daydream of mine, capturing a romantic story of someone you’re singing your song about actually showing up in the crowd. It almost feels like a theatrical song to me. Writing it I was picturing my favorite movie scenes from my childhood gems – like Miley performing The Climb in Hannah Montana the movie or Demi Lovato performing This Is Me in Camp Rock. As a kid I was obsessed with those kind of movies and watched these scenes over and over again. Wallowing in it was so endlessly exciting, I had no idea how scary this would actually be now that I find myself on stages performing my own songs.
That childhood reference point matters. Piano lessons, self-taught guitar, bedroom writing, and early local gigs shaped BROCKHOFF’s move toward the guitar-driven sound that now anchors her world.
It has always been the best thing ever for me: making music on my own, writing poems or song lyrics and melodies, singing them in my room, imagining me performing them on every possible stage in this universe. It can be so scary for me to do the same thing in an actual room full of people, strangers or even worse people I know so well, like maybe even people I write songs about. With ‘Front Row’ I always feel a bit like 13 again, romanticizing this whole experience of touring and playing live, it’s a fun and exciting song to me.
![BROCKHOFF’s debut album Easy Peeler (out June 5 via [PIAS] Recordings Germany)](https://www.famemagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/BROCKHOFFs-debut-album-Easy-Peeler-out-June-5-via-PIAS-Recordings-Germany.jpg)
Easy Peeler turns that tension into album form, blending ’90s guitar rock, bright pop arrangements, and the pressure of becoming visible.
Following The Carpet Song, Easy Peeler, Willows, and Sunny Day (Deadline), Front Row keeps the nerve exposed: openness as risk, performance as pressure, sensitivity as the hit.