UK shoegaze legends Swervedriver return on Dangerbird Records with the new album Future Ruins. The follow up to 2015's I Wasn't Born to Lose You presents a band moving with real time and real life vitality, showcasing new tricks alongside classic hallmarks. Future Ruins exhibits Swervedriver's fabled widescreen escapism, but with a tension that echoes the sleeve image of Coney Island in skeletal monochrome, like a post mortem photograph of a failed utopia.
"There's a lot of foreboding with regard to the future on this album," says the band's Adam Franklin. "Space is in there a lot too. In the first song ["Mary Winter"], the character is a spaceman who's trying to remember what life is really like. Also, it could be about somewhere in the world where winter isn't like the winter here. A sunny place, but it's December or January and you're trying to remember winter. Something's going on."
Fellow single "Drone Lover" sails and soars while a conscious chorus comments on the depersonalized nature of 21st century techno-warfare.
- Mary Winter
- The Lonely Crowd Fades In The Air
- Future Ruins
- Theeascending
- Drone Lover
- Spiked Flower
- Everybody's Going Somewhere & No-One's Going Anywhere
- Golden Remedy
- Good Times Are So Hard To Follow
- Radio-Silent