The trio's new self-titled LP is a reverb-drenched journey into what you think about during your commute. The band combine fast, unstable punk and echoing noise rock, with just a pinch of growling garage menace thrown on top. Tracks Be Anti and Like Envy confront social media's stranglehold over our self-esteem, while Power Trip and Natural Selection take darker, more introspective looks at modern-day survival, all with ambient numbers like (in the news) dividing them up. The result is a record that feels familiar in an awesome if disheartening way.
We caught up with Weeping Icon and spoke to them about where they're coming from, and what keeps their hackles so raised.
What are you most excited for fans to hear on the new album?
It’s been a couple years since we released our first EP, which for us, was very much a fresh and raw burst of energy. We’ve developed a lot as a creative unit and as individuals over the past couple years, and that change is documented over the course of the album. We’re really excited to share the lyrical content, which moves beyond the pre-#metoo-era fury that was stirring so much a couple years ago (which drove a lot of the prior album), and into vaster territories of generational existential woe. The sociopolitical climate over the past couple years has obviously been pretty morose and it’s reflected in the heaviness of the music we wrote. We try to be intentional with every aspect of our art, so it’ll be interesting to see people’s reactions to the deeply mediated choices we made throughout these divisive, frictional times.
You hit a solid middle ground between punk, indie rock, shoegaze, and other genres -- is that your patented sound, or something that's evolving? Do you have a name for it?
We don’t exactly have a name for what we do -- we tend to change the genres and musical references we use to explain our music a lot. It might make it hard to pinpoint what Weeping Icon is in the greater musical landscape, but our music is a direct reflection of what we like and how we’re feeling at any given time, so it’ll always be subject to change. We love a lot of genres so it’s kind of all in there and will probably get weirder over time. It’s fun to hear what others hear in our music though, so if you have a good comparison or name for what we do, we’re all ears!