Knumears’ Matthew Cole takes us through the intricate creation of their caustic, crushing and cathartic debut album.

Introduction
We knew we wanted to open the record with something that was heavy and suspenseful. A few years back, we played with Massa Nera and watched them open their set with the song ‘Bloated’ and immediately knew we wanted to emulate the same feeling. The song came together fairly easily, considering the whole thing is three notes. The dynamics were what we wanted to focus on the most. Have a somewhat serene landscape, like opening going into as claustrophobic a sound as possible.
One light, Sunshine
‘One light, Sunshine’ immediately came after ‘Introduction’. Being avid listeners of vinyl, we think it’s really cool when songs flow perfectly on a record, so we tried our hand at that. We went through two different versions of this song, testing both of them out live. We played our first version on a run with Jerome’s Dream, but it didn’t feel right. After we got back from the tour, we sat back down and rewrote the second half of the song. I kind of look at this song as two separate songs. One light being opening half, and Sunshine being from the drum break on.
My Name
‘My Name’ was a song that kind of just wrote itself. I had come to practice with an idea of a riff that I hummed into my voice memos on the drive there. When we got to practice, I figured out the riff, and everything just came together. A few weeks prior I had written some lyrics down hoping to eventually write a song that they fit and luckily this was the one. My favourite part of this song is the end when the two vocals are battling one another. We had our friend Griffin write his own verse that he thought was fitting for the song, and had him hop on.
Breaking Ground
‘Breaking Ground’ was one of the last songs we wrote for this record, but I think our collective favourite. We usually tend to write a song and then immediately play it at the next show before we give it our complete stamp of approval, but this song was different. Writing this song felt a little more special to all of us i think. As soon as we were finished at practice, we were satisfied with the outcome. I wrote the lyrics to this song about 10 minutes before i recorded them but they turned out to be my favorite words I’ve written thus far.
Directions
We wrote this song in the studio with the help of Jack Shirley. It took a decent amount of experimenting to find cool tones and sounds. Dante started playing the Rhodes and came up with the main melody for this song. The guitar part is just a slowed-down version of the ending riff of the record. I used my EHX Holy Grail with the hall setting as high as possible. The biggest struggle of this song were the drums. Nothing at the time seemed quite fitting, and hitting the downbeats at the perfect time took a few tries because frankly, none of it is in time.
Untitled
This is the first song we had written for this record about 3 years ago. It was the first time we ever tuned down from standard, and we never looked back. We released this song on a split with Clay Birds in 2023, but knew from the start that it was going to go on our next record. This is one of our favourite songs to play live because it feels like the energy is there from the jump, and having a pretty obnoxious breakdown at the end helps too.
Bridged
‘Bridged’ is another song that we released prior to recording the record. It was originally on a 4-way split with Vs Self, Party Hats, and Catalyst. We originally recorded this song at Dante’s parents’ house in about an hour. We were on a time crunch because I had to go to work, so it didn’t turn out as good as we were hoping for initially. When we play this song live, we always play it after Untitled, with the transition between the two songs being the same as how we recorded it. This is the first song that really garnered my love for feedback.
Fade Away
This was the most difficult song to write on this record. I came to practice with the opening riff but had absolutely no clue how to continue it. I tried to convince Frankie that we should just scrap it, but thankfully, he didn’t let us. Getting Jeff from Jerome’s Dream to do vocals on this song was pretty surreal. I think it’s fairly obvious that we took a lot of inspiration for this song from early JD, and when writing the lyrics, I knew that I wanted Jeff to have a part in it. Going on tour with JD built a good relationship between all of us, and both of us recording with Jack Shirley made it feasible. It did take a decent amount of convincing, but in the end, it turned out to be one of the coolest things to happen to us.
Friendly Face
We deliberately tried to write this song in a sort of “verse, chorus, verse, chorus”-y way. We tend to write songs in sections that don’t often repeat, but this riff seemed fitting to repeat. We finished writing this song the night before a show and decided that it would be a good idea to play this song at the show. It did not go well. We kept messing up, and I didn’t have any lyrics, so I was kind of just making noises into the mic. We went back to the song a few days later and polished it up, and it turned out to be one of my favourites that we’ve written.
The North
This song came together very quickly, and we knew that it was going to be the ender. We all like when albums feel relieved at the end and I think that this song gave us that feeling. This is the most direct love song that I’ve written, so it felt fitting to conclude a record that holds a lot of other weighted emotions with the strongest one.
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