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Knuckle Puck - Losing What We Love [Indie Exclusive Limited Edition Pink/Blue LP]

Details

Format: Vinyl
Label: PURE NOISE
Rel. Date: 10/20/2023
UPC: 810540035994

Losing What We Love [Indie Exclusive Limited Edition Pink/Blue LP]
Artist: Knuckle Puck
Format: Vinyl
New: OUT OF STOCK
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. A New Beginning
2. The Tower
3. October
4. You & I
5. Losing What We Love
6. Groundhog Day
7. Act Accordingly
8. Out of Touch
9. Worlds Apart
10. Better Late
11. Fool

More Info:

Chicago, US- Knuckle Puck, one of the most celebrated acts in the modern pop-punk scene have announced their new album Losing What We Love to be released 20th October 2023. Over the last thirteen years the band have nurtured their craft across three albums and have artfully balanced their emotional spectrum, trading in high-tempered and deeply introspective lyricism, but also cutting the tension with an underlying layer of optimism. But now, with the release of their fourth LP, Losing What We Love, Knuckle Puck are done sugarcoating life’s hard truths. It is a record about coming to terms with exactly that. It is an attempt to lean into the transition between a high point in life to a low point. These songs are a tribute to the familiar while acknowledging that nothing can stay the same forever. “For a long time, we felt a responsibility to have this overwhelming hopefulness to our lyrics,” Cassasanto explains. “This time around, we started writing more honestly with less intent to sound cool or hopeful. It feels like we’re in a bit of a losing battle with the state of the world, but in the past we’d say, ‘Oh, but it’s all OK!’ Now we’re saying, ‘No, we should be panicking.’ This record feels like more of an expression than a motivational speech.” Recorded with longtime producer Seth Henderson (State Champs, Real Friends), Losing What We Love follows 2022’s Disposable Life EP and marks the band’s first LP for Pure Noise Records. In many ways, it’s a throwback to their earliest days – not necessarily in sound, but in songwriting essence, tapping into the same collaborative magic they found in bedrooms and garages across Chicago’s south suburbs as teenagers.

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