Interview: Quickfire with Night Wolf and Lois Powell

Some of the most interesting music projects start with the most unexpected encounters. For producer Night Wolf and singer-songwriter Lois Powell, that encounter was at a Bedford open mic night.

Fast forward to 2026, and the duo have just unveiled their next collaboration and, in our view, their most ambitious work yet.

Sonically brave and cinematic, ‘Unstoppable’ sets a haunting tone from the first note, gradually unfolding into a mesmerising blend of trip-hop and alt-pop. This is a song that feels bold and refined, saving its most powerful moments until the end.

Powell’s vocals carry a sense of vulnerability that has seen her championed by the likes of BBC Introducing, while Night Wolf provides a production that is nothing short of epic in scale. It’s a sound that feels second nature to him – a testament to his reputation as a producer whose work is a regular fixture on outlets like Netflix and the NFL.

We’re excited to share our conversation with this talented duo as they continue to carve out one of the most interesting artistic partnerships to emerge from the East of England.

Since that first meeting at a Bedford open mic, you’ve collaborated on four tracks together. How has your creative relationship and synergy evolved between that first encounter and the making of ‘Unstoppable’?

Lois Powell (L.P): From strangers to getting texts everyday about interviews to answer. It’s strange the journey we have gone on. Making music together I think we got to know each other’s vibes pretty quickly as music is a big expression of someone’s underworld. And overtime things just became normal like he’s always been in my life.

Night Wolf (N.W): We have grown to understand how we both operate when in creation mode, the first two songs were already nearly worked out with lyrics, the second of our songs ‘Death Of Wolf’ was co written by Lois for lyrics but ‘Unstoppable’ is Lois really being allowed to take the reigns and sing about how this song made her feel while I produced around her in an afternoon together at my studio. We have become friends I would say now and I enjoy supporting her in anything I can in the music world. I know who I would want to work on specific projects now and know that our best work is yet to come.

The song is described as having positive lyrics seen through a broken lens. How did you both work together to balance that gritty, honest edge in the lyrics with a soundscape that captures a sense of resilience?

L.P: I suppose Night Wolf took what he heard and made something with it within the context that he had, and so did I. And intuitively we came up with something that worked. 

N.W: I really let Lois let loose on this song, I followed her and the mood that she was giving whilst singing, we built around her building the vocals so it really was very in the moment and based on feelings alone, we did not discuss what we were even doing before just doing it, I liked a guitar riff Lois had played on a voice recording she sent me and asked her to preform it so I could record, everything fell into place after this and it also felt right to keep it a slow burn and have a climax at the end, it also follows how we recorded the song as each take we would push for more volume and no longer being tame. I enjoy Lois’s lyrics and writing and feel it goes well with the type of music I enjoy making.

Did you intentionally lean into cinematic, ‘sync-ready’ undertones during the writing process, or did the song’s dramatic arc evolve naturally?

L.P: I think me and Night Wolf both love drama by nature. When I’m thinking about what I was doing there wasn’t much thoughtful intention put into it – the only intent was delivering the lyrics how I felt them in my body, regarding my emotions. 

N.W: I never create a piece of music to fit something specifically or even have other then what starts to create itself in my mind before recording, so just always base the music I am making on how I feel that day, how the lyrics make me feel or even the mood of the other person I’m working with. I do have very far back in my mind whilst creating thinking what scene this could fit but I do not let it dictate how I make a song. I just honestly enjoy using orchestral VST’s and enjoy making a style that could be good for visual storytelling as well. We are actually planning on starting to film for our music videos for each of our songs so we can continue to push the story telling elements of our music. Going back to your question, it was just a very natural build and made sense in my head anyway, for it to be reserved but have this climax where it all comes together following Lois’s vocal takes. You can find more of my works with a cinematic touch and other collaborations on my website too – nightwolfuk.com

‘Unstoppable’ is a classic slow burn that saves its climax for the very end. From both a vocal and production standpoint, what was the reasoning behind holding back that energy until the near end?

L.P: I guess it took time to get into it, first the scene must be set – I’m waiting for spring, I’m inspired, I’m working. And through all these states the message that rings clearest and loudest is the breath, remaining in the present and carrying you forward. 

N.W: We just went with the flow, each time Lois recorded we pushed for more and it came out this way in the final song as well, I think personally it would have lost its impact and emotion if I had repeated this section earlier in the song, I enjoy that it can be used as a pivotal moment in visual storytelling, like when the main character realises they don’t have to run away from their problems anymore and are turning around to face it head on storm and all. It was really built around Lois and then Lois built in turn around what I was doing, this song was recorded in an afternoon and finished the next day or so. 

The track blends trip-hop, alt-pop, and cinematic strings. Where does this specific sound sit within your collaborative work, and how does it represent the current direction of your partnership?

L.P: I am not sure. All the songs have a hip kind of feel with drums etc. but they also carry this layered orchestral vibe. 

N.W: I think this is very much my input as I am bringing Lois into my world or my head! I really enjoy making this sort of music it feels personal and like it is really us trying to convey so many emotions into our music and just make what feels right in the moment, I have also been quite stuck in a mindset of treating music like a piece of art where once its done and the last brush stroke is laid down, you don’t keep coming back to it, in fact I actually went against this logic this time and went back to remaster the tracks before release, I then actually added the wrong file to the submission and only noticed a week or so before release when listened back to the submission, so…. Yer I am a little annoyed its not the version I wanted the world to hear but its something I can live with hence not pulling it! I feel Lois and I create music that should be used for James Bond films or such as the like. We also have another song called ‘The Laws Of Life’ being released on EscaVolt Records coming on 21st March 2026 and this will be our fourth collaboration together. We hope you enjoy our next song too and plenty more to come in the near future! Thank you very much for listening and taking the time to read about us, please follow me on my socials @NightWolfUK

Night Wolf | Lois Powell | Ones To Watch Playlist