Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Sorry Unleash New Single/Video "Let The Lights On"


London garage rock/post punk/alt band Sorry have the video for their new single "Let The Lights On".

The song is taken from the forthcoming album 'Anywhere But Here', set to arrive on October 7th via Domino. Pre-order your copy here.

London once again features as a prominent character on Sorry’s second album. ’If our first version of London in 925 was innocent and fresh-faced, then this is rougher around the edges. It's a much more haggard place,’ Louis says. Earwigged conversations, text messages, snatched speech recorded underground; the city’s discarded words fed into the lyrics which map the experience of urban life on a young and frustrated generation. Produced alongside Portishead’s Adrian Utley in Bristol, the result is an angular, acerbic, bittersweet triumph.

Watch/listen below.


Tags: Sorry

High Vis Premiere New Single "Blending"


London post punk band High Vis have premiere their new single "Blending".

The song serves as the title track of their their forthcoming sophomore album 'Blending', set to be released on September 9h via DAIS Records. Pre-order your copy here.

High Vis have exploded onto the DIY scene, earning a devoted following for their intense live shows and immediate lyrics that tackle themes from class politics to the challenges of everyday life. While their passion of hardcore stokes their fire, its post-punk’s textures and moods that line their sonic adventurousness, which suggests the members of High Vis are never going to be confined by any notion of what they should or shouldn’t be playing. 

They’ve created their own signature sound of aggressive, gripping, artful punk that’s as tough as any hardcore record yet sonically opens beyond the parameters of any genre or scene. And as the title of their highly anticipated new album suggests, Blending is about bringing all these new strands and elements into what the band are about at their core to forge something entirely new. Alongside longstanding favourites such as Fugazi and Echo and The Bunnymen; Ride and even Flock Of Seagulls were shared reference points as the band worked on the album together.

Blending has a more specific meaning that links to front person Graham Sayle’s lyrics too, he explains, “The message of the album is you’re not who you’re told you are,” Sayle summarises. “You’re not your class background. Whatever it is, you’re not that. Don’t resign yourself to thinking you can’t be this and you can’t be that.”

Watch a lyric video below.

Tags: High Vis