
Fat Dog have unleashed their latest single, ‘Pray To That’. Released on late July 28 2025, the track marks their second release since their adrenaline-charged debut album, WOOF., dropped in September 2024.
Recorded at Dan Carey’s studio, the single was co‑produced by Love and Carey. The collaboration elevates the track’s raw intensity, merging club sensibilities with Fat Dog’s anarchic flair.
Originating from South London during the lockdown, Fat Dog rapidly became known for chaotic, genre‑blending live performances, merging elements of punk, dance, and klezmer‑tinged arrangements. Their debut, WOOF., brought them major attention in 2024, with NME declaring it a five‑star explosive force in UK music.
The music video, directed by Dylan Coates, shows Love as a deranged preacher whipping a congregation into weird worship, the video’s lo‑fi aesthetic perfectly mirroring the track’s unhinged spirit.
‘Pray To That’ builds naturally on the momentum of earlier singles like ‘Peace Song’, released in late 2024, and tracks from WOOF. such as ‘King of the Slugs’, ‘All the Same’ and ‘Running’. Each release showcases a fearless blending of techno, punk, and surreal lyricism.
User reviews on Album of the Year include quotes like “Of course this is growing on me” and “ITS F*CKING FAT DOG BABY!”, a testament to the track’s visceral appeal. Meanwhile, Bandcamp describes ‘Pray To That’ as “negative white loud, uncompromising, angry, building toward a climactic explosion via brass elements and plateauing into dizzying momentum.”
Fat Dog continue their live maelstrom through the summer festival season, including appearances at Boomtown, Green Man, Boardmasters, Iceland Airwaves and others, before embarking on a full U.S. headlining tour starting September 2025
The band also played a twice at this year’s Glastonbury Festival; once on the Woodsies stage, and then a secret set at Strummerville.
In short, ‘Pray To That’ captures Fat Dog’s ethos: music that’s visceral, unfiltered, and uncompromising. It’s a track for dancing through disillusionment, for laughing at the void. If you’ve ever wanted your anxiety set to bassline intensity—and your existential dread served with a side of dark wit—this is your anthem.