Loading AI tools
British post-hardcore band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Svalbard are a British post-hardcore band from Bristol, England. Formed in 2011 by co-lead vocalists and guitarists Serena Cherry and Liam Phelan with drummer Mark Lilley, the band's line-up has featured bassist Matt Francis since 2020. Primarily exhibiting a post-hardcore and post-metal sound, the band's style features elements of black metal, crust punk, post-rock and shoegaze.
Svalbard | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Bristol, England, UK |
Genres | |
Years active | 2011–present |
Labels |
|
Spinoffs | Noctule |
Members |
|
Past members |
|
Website | svalbard |
Following the release of early material compiled on the compilation album Discography 2012–2014 (2015), Svalbard were signed to Holy Roar Records in January 2015. They released two albums, One Day All This Will End (2015) and It's Hard to Have Hope (2018), before parting ways with Holy Roar and moving to Church Road Records three weeks before the release of When I Die, Will I Get Better? (2020), due to sexual misconduct allegations against the label's founder. Svalbard's fourth album and first for Nuclear Blast Records, The Weight of the Mask (2023), was released on 6 October 2023.
Svalbard was formed in Bristol in 2011 by guitarists Serena Cherry and Liam Phelan and drummer Mark Lilley.[1] Cherry and Phelan first met each other in Bath, Somerset, whilst Cherry was touring with her "weird post-rock solo project".[2][3] They later met and recruited Lilley after hearing him play at a rehearsal studio, forming the core of the band.[2] The band took their name from Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy, where the archipelago of Svalbard serves as a fictional setting (especially in Northern Lights).[4] Cherry also said of the band's name:
Svalbard [...] is locked in a constant state of change – it is either freezing over in winter, or melting in summer. It never stays the same for long; I feel this is symbolic of the ways in which all art is never “in the moment” but in a state of either becoming, or reflecting upon, what it is going to be next.[5]
Cherry, Phelan and Lilley would hold Svalbard's line-up constant throughout their early releases, and over the course of several line-up changes (particularly in regards to bassists).[1][2][3] Svalbard recorded their eponymous debut EP in 2012 as a five piece featuring bassist Ben Thomas and vocalist Mike Thompson,[6] with neither Cherry nor Phelan wanting to handle vocal duties.[7][8] However, when both members left the band shortly after it was recorded, they decided to split lead vocal duties between themselves.[7][8] In 2013, the band recorded two EPs with bassist Christian Prince, Gone Tomorrow and Flightless Birds,[6][9] whilst also contributing a cover of "This Is the End" by Victims to the four-way collaborative EP Cover Buzz (2013) with Pariso, MINE and Let It Die.[10]
Svalbard began writing material for their debut album at their practice space in early 2014. Most of the album was written whilst the band were "in between bassists".[11][12] During this time, Svalbard worked on a collaborative/split EP with Pariso, released on 7 July 2014.[13][14] Pariso's guitarist, Alex Fitzpatrick, would subsequently sign Svalbard to his independent label, Holy Roar Records, in January 2015.[15][16] Shortly after signing with the label, Svalbard released the compilation album Discography 2012-2014, featuring all of their recorded output up until that point.[17] It was remastered by Brad Boatright and reissued in October 2016.[18] Svalbard's debut album, One Day All This Will End, was released on 25 September 2015.[19][20] Through Love handled the release in Germany and Halo of Flies in the US.[21] Well-received by critics, the album's first pressing through Holy Roar sold out within the first week of its release.[22] Music videos (created by Phelan) were released for the tracks "Disparity" and "Expect Equal Respect", the latter advocating for the acceptance of women within extreme music without treating them as anomalies.[21] A split EP with The Tidal Sleep featuring one new song from each band followed on 15 January 2017; a music video (also filmed and edited by Phelan) for Svalbard's side of the split, "Open the Cages", was released on 12 November 2016.[23]
Svalbard entered a period of turmoil following touring in support of One Day All This Will End due to the long-term illnesses of Cherry and Phelan and the departure of their bassist. After recruiting bassist Adam Parrish, the band regrouped to record their second album It's Hard to Have Hope in September 2017.[24][25] Expanding on the heavier and melodic tendencies of One Day All This Will End,[26] the album was noted for its social and political themes,[27][28] covering unpaid internships, revenge porn, feminism, abortion, animal welfare, sexual assault and long-term illness.[29] Following the album's release on 25 May 2018,[30] Svalbard embarked on tours of Europe and the United Kingdom, which included a performance at the 2018 ArcTanGent Festival[31] and supporting dates with OHHMS and La Dispute.[32][33] In early 2019, Parrish left Svalbard and was replaced by Alex Heffernan.[34] Heffernan had briefly filled in on bass for Svalbard in 2016;[6] although he declined an offer to join the band back then, he would express interest in doing so shortly before Parrish left the band.[34][35][36] Afterwards, Svalbard performed at the 2019 Roadburn Festival as part of a Holy Roar Records showcase,[37][38] before embarking on their first ever tour of Japan with The Tidal Sleep in May 2019.[39]
In early July 2020, Svalbard announced their third studio album When I Die, Will I Get Better? for a mid-September release through Holy Roar. Three weeks before the album's planned release, the band severed their ties and associations with Holy Roar due to the recent sexual misconduct allegations against its founder Alex Fitzpatrick. The band subsequently signed with Church Road Records and would release the album with them on September 25, as well as arrange refunds for people who preordered the album through Holy Roar. Metal Hammer named it as the 5th best metal album of 2020.[40] On 11 December 2020, Svalbard played their last show with Heffernan, who wanted to concentrate on a career in graphic design, at the Kerrang! K! Pit in London.[41][42] He was replaced by Matt Francis.[43]
On 28 June 2022, Svalbard signed to Nuclear Blast Records. As part of their signing to the label, Nuclear Blast acquired the rights to the band's albums released through Holy Roar.[44] They released their fourth album, The Weight of the Mask, on 6 October 2023.[45]
Svalbard's sound has been primarily been described as post-hardcore and post-metal, as well as hardcore punk, crust punk, D-beat, melodic hardcore, black metal, "blackened hardcore" and post-rock.[lower-alpha 1] Whilst Svalbard's output has consistently displayed elements of post-rock, crust punk and black metal,[63][64][53] their later albums since It's Hard to Have Hope have been noted for introducing more metal,[65] atmospheric[60][66] and shoegaze[67][68] elements. The members of Svalbard have cited bands including Alcest, Explosions in the Sky, Helmet, Mew, Mogwai, Mono, Nasum, Slipknot and This Will Destroy You as musical influences.[69][70][71][72] Cherry has also cited the soundtracks to The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim and the Kingdom Hearts and Final Fantasy series as influences on her guitar leads for the band.[73]
Since 2014,[74] all of Svalbard's recorded output had been produced by Lewis Johns at the Ranch Production House in Southampton. In a 2023 interview with Echoes and Dust, Cherry called Johns "the fifth member of Svalbard", praising his ability to "[draw] the best out of [the band] musically".[75]
Current members
|
Past members
|
Timeline
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Themselves | Best British Breakthrough Act | Nominated | [77] |
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | The Weight of the Mask | Best Metalgaze Album | Won | [78][79] |
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | The Weight of the Mask | Best Album Artwork | Nominated | [80][81] |
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
UK Ind. [82] |
UK Rock [82] |
SCO [82] | ||
One Day All This Will End |
|
— | — | — |
It's Hard to Have Hope |
|
— | — | — |
When I Die, Will I Get Better? |
|
— | — | — |
The Weight of the Mask |
|
29 | 9 | 79 |
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory |
Title | Details |
---|---|
Discography 2012–2014 |
|
Title | EP details |
---|---|
Svalbard | |
Gone Tomorrow |
|
Flightless Birds |
|
Cover Buzz (with Pariso, Let It Die, Mine) |
|
Pariso / Svalbard |
|
Svalbard / The Tidal Sleep |
|
Title | Year | Album |
---|---|---|
"Ripped Apart"[84] | 2014 | Pariso / Svalbard |
"Disparity" | 2015 | One Day All This Will End |
"Expect Equal Respect" | 2016 | |
"Open the Cages"[23] | Svalbard / The Tidal Sleep | |
"Unpaid Intern" | 2018 | It's Hard to Have Hope |
"Revenge Porn" | ||
"For the Sake of the Breed" | ||
"Open Wound" | 2020 | When I Die, Will I Get Better? |
"Listen to Someone" | ||
"Silent Restraint" | 2021 | |
"Eternal Spirits" | 2023 | The Weight of the Mask |
"Faking It" | ||
"How to Swim Down" |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.