Today, the band have launched a colorful video with artwork by Japanese artist Tetsunori Tawaraya animated by Los Angeles-based artist Rob Fidel.
New York City post-hardcore band Quicksand have made their long-awaited return with the new single "Inversion." The track follows the band's successful album from 2017, 'Interiors.' Thoughtful, driving, and powerful, like the long-lived band itself, the song has an emotional resonance that is only amplified by the events of the past stressed-out, locked-down year.
"The music to 'Inversion' was very squatter punk at first," says frontman Walter Schreifels. "To get something going vocally I started singing in an English Niel Nausea kind of vibe (Nausea are a peace/squatter punk band from the Lower East Side of Manhattan). The lyrics reflect the push and pull of being very connected through technology while at the same time being the most emotionally isolated group of humans to ever walk the planet and fun stuff like that." Today, the band have launched a colorful video with artwork by Japanese artist Tetsunori Tawaraya animated by Los Angeles-based artist Rob Fidel. Check it out here.Formed in 1990, Quicksand made their full-length debut with Slip-a 1993 release praised by The A.V. Club as "a nearly flawless record that combines the irony and heaviness of Helmet with Fugazi's penchant to dismantle sound in the most energetic ways." Arriving in 1995, their sophomore album Manic Compression appeared at #1 on the Top Five Best Post-Hardcore Records list from LA Weekly (who noted that "if there were any justice in the world, Quicksand would have been the biggest underground band of the '90s").
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