“I kept asking her who she'd been working with and after a while, it got through my head that she really was doing everything from start to finish in her bedroom on her own." —Joe Kentish
Since then, Kentish and Blake have paired Griff with writers and producers including Lostboy, AoD and Felix Joseph but are being selective to preserve the sound she’s cultivated alone. “I think the best Griff records will be those that have the most of her in them,” Kentish says. Griff is working toward an album set to land in 2022, with more songs released throughout this year. Her appearance at London’s 2k-capacity Shepherd’s Bush Empire in October—part of a U.K. and European tour—sold out in 24 hours. Blake hopes to expand her creative footprint into fashion (she makes all her own costumes). A U.S. tour is coming in February. U.S. TV promo has so far included performances on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert and Late Night With Seth Meyers, and the artist has enjoyed a global Spotify RADAR campaign (the first to cover multiple markets). Kentish also signed Dua Lipa and has hopes for a similar trajectory for Griff. “There's so much they have in common in terms of their ability to keep pushing and get better, a quiet steely ambition and the confidence they inspire in the people around them. So absolutely, those are our ambitions and that's where Griff wants to get. I think the way you get there is by encouraging the artist to be as creative and as different as possible. That was a big part of Dua’s success—she always wanted to find a sound, a lyrical identity, a narrative and a look that was all hers and that's exactly the same with Griff.” Griff is published by Universal Music Publishing, where she was signed by Pete Simmons, Colette Goodfellow and Mike McCormack.