Latest news with #FataMorgana
Yahoo
14-03-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Spiritbox have released two new live tracks only available until tomorrow
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Spiritbox have shared two new live tracks that will be available for less than 48 hours. The Canadian metalcore heavyweights have released live versions of Fata Morgana and Perfect Soul, recorded during their February shows at London's Alexandra Palace and Paris' L'Olympia respectively, as part of a limited deluxe edition of new album Tsunami Sea. Download Tsunami Sea: Live Bonus Edition, which features the songs, before the link expires on Thursday (March 13) at 11:59pm. Spiritbox toured Europe in February and released Tsunami Sea on March 7. They released a video recording of Fata Morgana at Alexandra Palace on Tuesday (March 11). Watch it below. Tsunami Sea was released to critical acclaim, including a glowing nine-out-of-10 review from Metal Hammer. Journalist Rich Hobson wrote: 'Tsunami Sea feels like the moment Spiritbox firmly step into their own as a band who could contend with the likes of Bring Me The Horizon and Sleep Token, as the next zeitgeist-setting act.' Spiritbox were recently on the cover of Metal Hammer and talked extensively about the story behind Tsunami Sea. Vocalist Courtney LaPlante spoke about the band's insistence to evolve musically and not repeat themselves. 'Statistically, if I was to look at the song that broke us out, [2020 single] Holy Roller, it would be more financially stable to just continue only making that,' she said. 'I love an identity crisis, because it helps me not feel like I'm trapped in a box where I have to do this or that.' She added: 'Each record is a small time capsule; maybe the next album will lean more into the melodic stuff or maybe we'll have more electronic sounds or whatever. I think it just comes down to whatever we're interested in at the time. And if that means that we're genre-less or we just are unpredictable in that way, so be it.' Spiritbox will tour North America from April, but are set to return to the UK for Download festival in June. They will then support Linkin Park at London's 90,000-capacity Wembley Stadium on June 28.
Yahoo
10-03-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Spiritbox's track-by-track guide to Tsunami Sea
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Ever since they blew up online with Holy Roller, Spiritbox have been stepping up as one of metal's most exciting new bands. From collaborations (both on-stage and off) with artists like Architects, Megan Thee Stallion and Jinjer to tours with Bring Me The Horizon and Korn, they've stepped up time and again and now they're ready to present the next step in their artistic vision with new album Tsunami Sea. To celebrate the record's arrival, Hammer sat down with guitarist Mike Stringer and vocalist Courtney LaPlante to offer a track-by-track guide to the record. A rabid opener that immediately plunges us into a world much darker than anything on Eternal Blue. Mike: 'I would describe Fata Morgana as the mission statement of the album. It just comes out swinging, and it is very, very heavy." Three and a half minutes of bleak and mechanical tech metal, the pits aren't going to know what's hit them this summer. Mike: 'I would say it's a continuation of Fata Morgana and probably the heaviest song on the record.' Courtney: 'Black Rainbow is FREAKY!' Calling to mind Architects' Doomsday, this is Spiritbox at their most ethereal and melodic. Courtney: 'It's like a little bit of hopefulness. The first part of the album that has a little bit of hopefulness and yearning in it, and not just anger and sadness.' Evoking Keep Sweet: Pray And Obey, a sordid Netflix documentary about the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, this is the perfect blend of beauty and brutality. Mike: 'It's fun and very catchy. That's one of my favourites…' Courtney: '… but it's extremely bitter. It's a bitter taste in your mouth – a great way of trying to have someone who isn't a woman empathise with what it feels like to be a woman.' Drenched in nightmarish dread, 'You all deserve each other!' is already one of 2025's finest mosh calls. Mike: 'Hater song.' Courtney: 'I hate so many people. People think I'm so positive or, rather, neutral. No! I'm not neutral. I just don't want to be dunking on people that I fucking hate online.' Mike: 'So we made a song about it.' Instantly recognisable as the work of its creators, atmospheric and emotional – the title track is quintessential Spiritbox. Courtney: 'It's the feelings of never being good enough and the sad part is that it's by your own standards of why you will never feel good enough… and sinking down into depression.' Mike: 'I'd say it was the sister song of Eternal Blue.' A bittersweet love letter to their home, indebted to Deftones with a gorgeous, silky chorus. Courtney: 'It's about Vancouver Island. It's the haven with two faces.' Mike: 'This was us adventuring back to our roots in a more proggy direction. It's a wild ride and it's long.' Explosive and offkilter, the 'weird kid' of the album picks up where Eternal Blue's Yellowjacket left off. Mike: 'That would be 'experimental heavy'. It's very close to Holy Roller in a sense, as far as how quick the song is and how relentless it is. It's a wild one.' Rave vibes! This trancey, electronic-heavy track hints at an intriguing future direction. Mike: 'It's an experimental song we've always wanted to make, and it happened very organically, and I'm very proud of that one.' Courtney: 'I think it's a new side of our band.' Spiritbox have made massive walls of sound their calling card, and this track boasts a stonker, with one hell of a breakdown. Mike: 'Ride The Wave is another song that I've always wanted to make. It's very inspired by 28 Days Later instrumentally. It has my favourite chorus on the record.' Courtney: 'This is the first song that I tracked vocals to, and you couldn't feel my sadness and melancholy in the takes that I did. It has a bit of a fun march to it, you can dance a little to it, but it's sad.' Hitting like the breath of life after surfacing from the deep, Tsunami Sea's serene closer shimmers with hope. Courtney: 'We wrote Deep End before Bill passed, but that song now, to me, is my beacon to him."