Location: Oakland, California
Country: USA
Genre: Post metal, sludge
Full length: An Undying Love for a Burning World
Format: Digital album
Label: Neurot Recordings
Release date: March 20, 2026
It’s been a decade since we last heard from Neurosis. After the release of “Fires Within Fires,” certain sensitive issues involving their former frontman Scott Kelly surfaced and the band took an extended hiatus. I won’t go into details, but said issues were so serious that Kelly was asked to leave the band and retired as a vocalist and musician.
As sudden as their departure, their re-emergence was marked by a new vocalist, a new album, and a scheduled appearance at the Fire in the Mountains festival in Montana this July. From what I’ve read so far, the band is being welcomed back enthusiastically. “An Undying Love for a Burning World” aims to speak to listeners at the center of their being, demonstrating Neurosis’ ongoing relevance to post-metal and sludge.
The album introduces Aaron Turner, head of Hydra Head Records, who was the frontman of the post-metal band Isis and has worked with Sumac, House of Low Culture and Old Man Gloom and made guest appearances with the Japanese experimental band Boris. According to the band, past albums like “Enemy of the Sun,” “Through Silver in Blood,” “A Sun That Never Sets” and “The Eye of Every Storm” were made to be emotionally charged, serving as a cathartic outlet to purge tensions felt more personally than usual.
For many, they offer a form of catharsis from sensory overload from an increasingly insane society that seems more out of control. With all his experience, Turner brings a level of energy that matches the energy generated by the band, which has steadily increased in terms of the angst and frustration channeled into their work. There’s more than ever a desire to experience the sensation of sanity slipping away, wearing away, and to examine its causes more closely.
The evolution toward de-evolution and a breakdown of conventional songwriting mark a step forward for Neurosis’ revamped lineup. The band has always been adept at using cover artwork to hint at what awaits inside. This time the ever-expanding black hole on the cover, a portal into complete mental and emotional oblivion, primes you for the chaos and disorder that grips you from the outset, only to grow and intensify.
The heightened levels of distortion, dissonance, diatribes of division fostered upon humans shouted until throats are raw and hoarse, abrupt transitions to atmospheric passages, jarring shifts to nightmarish keyboard sections, strange noises and a barely restrained unraveling of structure defines Neurosis’ music more powerfully than I remember from them. Even so, there’s a strange sense of compelling beauty that accompanies all that chaos, as if the loss of sanity is a transformative journey, a trial by fire from which you emerge with a sense of inner peace and acceptance, having separated yourself from the overwhelming pressures that pushed you toward mental collapse.
As the band has described, the writing and recording process acted as a form of purging and purification, a means to reclaim some semblance of sanity after the hellish realization of how much of yourself you had lost beforehand. –Dave Wolff
Lineup:
Aaron Turner: Guitars, vocals
Steve Von Till: Guitars, vocals
Noah Landis: Synthesizers, backing vocals
Dave Edwardson: Bass, backing vocals
Jason Roeder: Drums
Track list:
1. We Are Torn Wide Open
2. Mirror Deep
3. First Red Rays
4. Blind
5. Seething and Scattered
6. Untethered
7. In the Waiting Hours
8. Last Light

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