Released jointly by Flatspot Records and Last Ride Records, Test Of The Iron Mind marks the return of Melbourne hardcore vets Iron Mind. Their third album—produced by Otis Bennie (AWOL), recorded at The Black Lodge by Sam Johnston, and mixed by Taylor Young at The Pit—takes all the grit they’ve had since day one and tightens it up into something heavier, more focused. It’s still got the old fire, but now it knows exactly where to burn.
Over the years, Iron Mind have evolved from relentless touring and stage-sharing with names like Turnstile, Terror, No Warning, and Harm’s Way, to a more measured pace, choosing instead to make their appearances count.
After 2023’s Assume Your Ultimate Form, the band regrouped with a clear sense of direction. As vocalist Sam Octigan explains, Test Of The Iron Mind is not just a title—it’s a deliberate statement that ties together their origins, their ongoing battles, and their current stance.
Thematically, the record is about enduring pain, rejecting passivity, and reclaiming agency—especially when your head’s messed up, emotions are heavy, or the world around you feels stuck. It’s about pushing through when doing nothing feels safer.
According to Octigan, it’s also about the “wisdom of age” and the need to pass on lessons learned to the next generation. That might mean encouraging young people to start bands, engage with their community, or simply believe they have the right to shape their lives without permission.
Here is the full track by track rundown from vocalist Sam Octigan.
More Pain
The record opener. It’s a nod or a play on the opening track from our 2012 LP Hell Split Wide Open – “Look Into My Eye” which contains a well known and memorable line (plea) “..no more pain.”
This is to be self reflective, suggesting that what’s been learned in the years between that record and this one is that things do not get easier, in our youth we might wish for our problems to go away, for a silver bullet, to switch off, – but wisdom is learning that pain and suffering are eternal and the solution isn’t to wish them away but to know that we can withstand pain, in any amount thrown at us.
“No more pain? Fuck that – more pain! How much you got?!”
How You Get Down – While Iron Mind’s sound is hard and aggressive, we’ve always been a band that champions scene involvement. We’ve always provided the message that it doesn’t matter how someone contributes, as long as they contribute. That may have come in the form of a pit call, or a conversation at the merch table. Ultimately, hardcore is music for the youth and as we’re returning as somewhat elder statesmen with this record, we wanted to encapsulate that message in a song that was us speaking directly to the youth, the next generation. “Show me how you get down!” Meaning, we don’t make the rules, we’re not hanging onto the old ways, we want to see the New Breed. This is your scene, you create the culture, be empowered to do your thing. We want to be inspired by what you’re doing – so be empowered to do it!
Terrified
An emotional and personal song reflecting on the fact that life circumstances are thrown at you, not on your preferred timeline. Sink or swim.
Dog Will Hunt
This song continues the themes of the opening track, speaking to the acknowledgment that pain, abuse, suffering will come my way and no matter what I’ll find a way forward. Something that is innate, instinctual, the urge to survive and grow stronger from hardship.
No Fate
Another message to not only the youth, but anyone of any age who looks to Iron Mind for creative inspiration. Drawing from the famous line from everyone’s favourite 90s action/sci-fi film Terminator 2 “there’s no fate but what we make for ourselves.” Again, with the wisdom of age we all have felt empowered to make the art that we want to make, not only in this band with this record, but also in our wider lives (I’m a visual artist, Neil is a wildlife photographer for example).
Perhaps we didn’t have this conviction when we were 18-19? And so the question we ask ourselves now in the senior position we have, do the younger generation of hardcore kids know the power they have in their hands to create new bands? Create art? Create the life that they want for themselves?
This song is both a personal statement “Take a look at me, never believed, there could be days like these!” and a message to those listening who haven’t been told that they don’t need permission to create the life that they want for themselves, that it’s not just for the in crowd or the select few, one life, one chance etc. “Gotta leap anyway, it’s your life, it’s your death, you’re afraid result’s the same.”
Test Of The Iron Mind
The eponymous track of the record speaks on several different layers. The first, is that Iron Mind has always had elements of self-reflexive lyrics dating back to our first release in 2008 with The Sun Has Set EP and the track “The Iron Mind.” This song has been a live staple ever since it was released and speaks to many of the themes that ‘Iron Mind’ stood for when the band formed and those lyrics were written – and still stand for today. That being, first and foremost the ongoing struggle with mental health that many of us deal with – and acknowledging the burden that this struggle bears on us “…struggling, searching over time, peace, well being… the Iron Mind”
We wanted to ‘sum up’ who and what Iron Mind is as a band with this new record, so Test Of The Iron Mind became the record title early on in the process, as a nod to our history but looking at the topic with contemporary eyes.
Paid In Full
These lyrics reflect on the real cost and benefit involved in being someone of integrity always, who values truth and honesty no matter what, even when it isn’t convenient, consistently over time.
Eye To Eye
These lyrics are purposefully ambiguous and play with different ideas. Telling an antagonist to look at themselves in the mirror, while at the same time these same challenges could always be asked of the protagonist.
The Crucible
This song is about rebirth through struggle. Starting again after gaining hard fought lessons, learnings and experience – realising that these lessons are hidden and not offered to us freely by the systems in place. Burning bridges and moving forward in the face of adversity.
Solitary Realm
The lead single off the record. A song about recognizing the tendency towards self isolation and the necessity to move away from it or suffer further consequences, while acknowledging the difficulty in doing so.
Iron Mind are hitting the road across Australia and New Zealand in June and July, celebrating the release of ‘Test Of The Iron Mind’. Tickets to all shows available now via link in bio or lastriderecords.com.
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