Toronto’s Beta Trip Drops Debut LP ‘Superette’—Britpop Cool with Lush, Dreamy Melodies

Toronto multi-instrumentalist Beta Trip (Steve Lewin) unveils his debut album ‘Superette’—a Britpop-infused journey of layered guitars, introspective lyrics, and sonic clarity. Featuring standout singles “Juliet,” “On My Mind,” and “What I Need.”

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Anders — Editorial Lead
Anders is the creative force and technical architect behind Divine Magazine’s editorial identity. Blending Scandinavian minimalism with a sharp instinct for digital storytelling, he shapes the...

Toronto-based multi-instrumentalist Beta Trip—known offstage as Steve Lewin—released his debut full-length album, Superette, on September 26 via Having Fun Records, the rock imprint of We Are Busy Bodies. Following two early singles that hinted at the project’s melodic richness and emotional reach, Superette arrives as a fully formed artistic statement, weaving Britpop textures, alt-rock energy, and introspective storytelling into a cohesive sonic journey.

Written, performed, and produced entirely by Lewin, the album balances intimacy and scale. Layered guitars, emotional grit, and a refined sense of craft reflect years of global touring and personal recalibration. Across ten tracks, Superette explores themes of growth, perspective, and the quiet tension between vulnerability and resilience.

The standout single “What I Need” captures this emotional duality with clarity. “You don’t know what I need; you don’t know what I’ve seen,” Lewin sings in the chorus—a line that anchors the track’s introspective tone. It’s one of the album’s most personal moments, threading honesty and restraint through a rising, cathartic arrangement that evokes the sonic palette of Radiohead and the lyrical immediacy of Nada Surf.

Earlier singles “Juliet” and “On My Mind” helped define the album’s creative core. Released June 13, “Juliet” quickly gained traction on CBC Radio 1 and 3, Portland’s XRAY FM, Calgary’s X92.9, and SiriusXM’s The Verge. Its chiming guitars and harmony-rich chorus introduced Beta Trip with polish and urgency. Follow-up “On My Mind,” released July 25, revealed a more spacious and reflective side of the project. Originally conceived as an acoustic piece, it expands into a slow-burning anthem Lewin describes as the sonic benchmark for the record—a moment where tone, theme, and vision fully aligned.

???? Order Beta Trip’s Music and Merchandise

From cinematic swells to raw, guitar-driven turns, Superette delivers a compact yet emotionally varied listening experience. The album’s title—borrowed from small, independently run corner stores—speaks to its spirit: a curated mix of essentials, full of personality and purpose. With influences ranging from Elbow and Pearl Jam to Teenage Fanclub, the record pays homage without imitation. Lewin’s production favors warmth and clarity, allowing each track to serve the larger mood of reflection and forward motion.

Though Superette marks Beta Trip’s debut LP, it’s far from a first step. After a string of independent EPs and years of international performance, Lewin returns with a sharpened identity and a cohesive body of work that reclaims his roots while pushing outward. Beta Trip is both a fresh chapter and a full-circle arrival—and with Superette, the Toronto artist offers a compelling introduction that resonates well beyond its runtime.

 Stream Album Superette: https://s.disco.ac/fwipmnuogibz

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/betatripbythegram/

Label: https://wearebusybodies.com/

Anders is the creative force and technical architect behind Divine Magazine’s editorial identity. Blending Scandinavian minimalism with a sharp instinct for digital storytelling, he shapes the magazine’s voice, visual rhythm, and structural clarity. His work moves between worlds — part editor, part engineer — ensuring every article is not only beautifully crafted but technically flawless beneath the surface. From SEO frameworks to asset design, from WordPress architecture to the magazine’s cinematic featured imagery, Anders builds the systems that let stories breathe. He curates Divine’s tone with intention: clean lines, honest language, and a commitment to elevating everyday subjects into something quietly extraordinary. Whether refining editorial workflows or sculpting the magazine’s long‑term creative direction, Anders brings a steady hand and an eye for detail — the kind that turns a publication into a signature.
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