Music

Calgary’s Summer Bruises Channel Gothic Urgency and Indie-Rock Atmosphere on ‘Out of Body’ LP feat. Lead Single “Death Disco”

Calgary-based indie-rock outfit Summer Bruises are releasing their sophomore album, Out of Body, recorded at OCL Studio with producer Lorrie Matheson.

The record asks the listener to face the archetype of the predator – internal, external, figurative, or literal. From cartoonish vampiric characters in “Sang Crême Glacée” to the volatile intensity of “With Me or At Me,” the album wrestles with abusive relationships, loneliness, self-reckoning, and the desire to heal. Lead single, “Death Disco,” pulses with unrelenting energy, balancing goth-inspired tension with a sharp post-punk edge.

Musically, Out of Body hears Summer Bruisesleaning into darker textures and isolating atmospheres compared to their debut. “As the album’s music and lyrics are ‘colder’ than our debut, Light to Waste, we isolated ourselves from each other in different rooms during recording or finished our tracks individually,” explains guitarist Aaron Smelski. “This was intentional and encouraged by our producer, Lorrie Matheson. Overall, it has a colder feel – similar to a Joy Division album – than warm cohesiveness like our previous record.”

The cold, drum-machine-inspired percussion and discordant piano break open the artery of lead single, “Death Disco,” creating a danceable yet uneasy atmosphere. While much of the band’s debut Light to Waste LP came together with harmony and ease, “Death Disco” was the first time Summer Bruisesencountered creative friction. “Don’t worry – we still love each other,” they clarify, “but it was the first time we really had to navigate through tension and find a healthy way forward.”

Stream Out of Body in full: https://summerbruises.hearnow.com/

Watch the official “Death Disco” music video, as well:

“We wanted to write a song that The Bat Cave, London circa 1980’s, would play,” Elyse Szabo (vocals, guitars, keyboards) and Aaron share. “‘Death Disco‘ is about the realization of what you’ve invited in – seeing your error in judgment, maybe realizing too late that you allowed yourself to be seduced. You’ve gone just past the point of no return, and the only way out is through.”

Though its working title stuck almost by accident, “Death Disco” is aptly named: a gothy dance track built on the tension between regret and release. “It makes me feel like I gotta dance through the regret,” says Elyse.

 

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