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Thrice
Post Hardcore, Progressive, Alt Rock

The California-based quartet, who’ve also been busy of late making high-profile main stage

appearances at the Coachella, Reading &

Leeds and Bamboozle festivals, have followed the New Pantheon Award-nominated Vheissu’s radical

metamorphosis with The

Alchemy Index, a four-volume collection spread between two releases comprised of four EPs, each

devoted to one of the classical

elements in nature—fire, water, earth and air—with each EP sonically and thematically tailored to

evoke the atmosphe ...read more

The California-based quartet, who’ve also been busy of late making high-profile main stage

appearances at the Coachella, Reading &

Leeds and Bamboozle festivals, have followed the New Pantheon Award-nominated Vheissu’s radical

metamorphosis with The

Alchemy Index, a four-volume collection spread between two releases comprised of four EPs, each

devoted to one of the classical

elements in nature—fire, water, earth and air—with each EP sonically and thematically tailored to

evoke the atmosphere inherent in

its corresponding element. This fall marks the release of the first two volumes of the series—Fire &

Water—while Earth & Air are

scheduled for a spring debut. For Thrice, it’s the realization of a year-long process of writing and

recording, which was done primarily

in the band’s own studio and engineered by guitarist Teppei Teranishi, without the assistance of an

outside producer.



“We’re kind of doing something that’s the opposite of what a producer is supposed to do on a record

—which is make everything

make sense and kind of fit together—whereas this project is all about taking things apart and

pushing them one way,” says

Teranishi. “We really wanted to try doing things our way this time around, and make this record

sound the way we want it to sound,

not the way it’s “supposed” to sound.”



“Dustin [Kensrue] came up with the idea of using the elements, and separating all of the feels that

we normally come up with,” adds

bassist Eddie Breckenridge. “That was scary at first, because part of what our sound is, is that

combination and the experiment of

mixing different feels, but this is actually helping us push each feel in a further direction.”



Thrice fans will likely find the thundering strains of Fire to be the most familiar of the four EPs, with

the kind of blistering riffs and

captivating melodies the band has built a career upon. From the opening bombast of “Firebreather”

to the towering, unforgettable

“Burn the Fleet,” with its Elliot Smith meets Isis vibe, Fire exhibits a Thrice who still know how to

punish with decibels, and with

greater force and impact than ever before.



“I’m really happy on how [“Burn The Fleet”] came out,” says drummer Riley Breckenridge, who also

resides in the house that holds

the band’s studio. “It’s really melancholy, yet crushing.”



Water, on the other hand, offers some of the most subdued textures the band have explored to date,

and makes extensive use of a

palette of electronic sounds, particularly for rhythms and synthesized effects. Haunting and

beautiful, Water is an aural aquatic

voyage as serene as it is somber, with the shimmering bliss of “Open Water” naturally coexisting

with the dark, moody “The Whaler”

and the groundbreaking and evocative instrumental track, “Night Diving.”



“For [“Night Diving”], we ended up making this whole plot outline of what’s happening in the song,

even though there are no lyrics.

That was how we decided on the different movements—when they’d come up, and when they’d come

down,” Kensrue says. “It’s the

story of this guy diving at night, and the things that he encounters. That was a pretty interesting

way to write a song; we definitely

had never done anything like that before.”



Kensrue also took the elemental theme to an entirely different level by composing an original sonnet

for each EP, set to music, yet

organized in the traditional English structure and rhythmic fashion. These passages (“The Flame

Deluge” on Fire; and “Kings Upon

The Main” for Water) offer powerful sentiments that serve as thought-provoking closers for each

EP’s respective journey.



“Each sonnet is written from the point of view of the personified element, speaking to mankind, and

lamenting our various failings,”

explains Kensrue. “The Fire sonnet deals with fire being resentful and ashamed of the way that it’s

been used in destruction and

war, while the Water sonnet deals with man’s pride, and the futility and idiocy of that pride, come

face to face with the power of the

sea.”



Although completed, the Earth & Air installments of the series will emerge in the spring, after

listeners have had a chance to fully

absorb the first half of the Alchemy Index’s massive, multi-layered complexity. A milestone offering

from a band with so much still

left to explore, the success of this seemingly daunting effort hints at the potential for even more

challenging, yet wholly

unpredictable, creations in the future.



“From here, we can kind of go anywhere,” Kensrue adds. “I don’t think anyone really knows what will

be next.”



On The Alchemy Index, Thrice destroyed the rock rulebook and created their most engrossing and

accomplished work to date…The

true evolution of a band. « hide

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