IMPORTANT NEWS!

Gripsweat is shutting down. Starting on February 1st, 2025 the site will no longer be doing daily updates, adding any new items, or accepting new memberships. The site will continue to run in this "historical" mode until January 1st, 2026, when the site will go offline. More information is available here.

YEARS OF DENIAL - Suicide Disco Vol 2 - Vinyl (gatefold 2xLP)

Sold Date: December 26, 2024
Start Date: November 26, 2024
Final Price: £32.74 (GBP)
Seller Feedback: 320937
Buyer Feedback: 0

This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.


Free delivery on many items.   Same-day despatch, no-question returns.   Authorised dealers - full technical support.   Online since 1997. Shop categories Information YEARS OF DENIAL Suicide Disco Vol 2 (gatefold 2xLP) VEYL Germany

Cat: VEYL 036X. Rel: 2 Dec 24
Coldwave/Synth


Side 1 - Track 1. Art BreakSide 1 - Track 2. WrongSide 1 - Track 3. La PendueSide 2 - Track 1. Mr GuillotineSide 2 - Track 2. Never SatisfiedSide 2 - Track 3. Lover's CrimeSide 3 - Track 1. City LightsSide 3 - Track 2. Dancing With DemonsSide 3 - Track 3. The LetterSide 4 - Track 1. Death Of A LoverSide 4 - Track 2. Regarding The Pain Of OthersSide 4 - Track 3. Social Anxiety (feat Broken English Club)

Years Of Denial is back on Veyl with their second LP, Suicide Disco Vol. 2, the follow up to 2019's Suicide Disco. Here the duo make a triumphant return, raising their sound to the plural heights of darkwave, goth, new beat, post-punk, EBM and techno. Opening with the prudent breaks charge 'Art Break' - on which the gothic black tears on the front cover collide imagistically with muddy bass whooshes and gated power-keg snares, and a sinisterly driven vocal line from Barkosina - we soon move into a pummelling dozen tracks. These draw cues from hard techno to dark synth, embracing and going to the ends of a hedonistic, paradoxical pursuit of pain. The record's algolagnia betrays itself more and more and more, with 'Death Of A Lover' and 'Regarding The Pain Of Others' taking an almost ritual approach to sonic blood sacrifice, as though it were an unconsciously fundamental fact of life. We're equally impressed by the less techno-ey moments on the record too, such as 'Mr. Guilllotine', a sonic gigantomachy of new-wave drum collisions and batlike animorphic howls.