Lost in Kiev by Stéphane Burlot
Lost in Kiev by Stéphane Burlot
New Music

French cinematic post-rock outfit LOST IN KIEV share new follow up single “We Are”

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French cinematic post-rock outfit LOST IN KIEV today unveils new single, “We Are.” The track comes by way of the band’s upcoming new full-length, Rupture, set for release on October 21st via Pelagic Records.

For over ten years, LOST IN KIEV has been creating massive, narrative-driven atmospheric rock opuses that have brought them to play on renowned festivals like Dunk!festival and AMFest, as well as on tours with acts like Enslaved and Maserati. After three years of pandemic-induced inertia, the four gentlemen from Paris return with their new record Rupture which sees them turn the page to a new chapter in their considerable career.

Recorded in a live-setting, Rupture concerns the band’s feelings about the drastic environmental changes that can be perceived all over the world. Casting their eco-angst into nine soaring and explorative tracks, LOST IN KIEV channels a sound that’s raw and pristine, reaching an emotive power beyond anything they’ve done before. “We Are” is the album’s opening theme, a pristine interplay of layered guitars and synths that erupts in a climax of digital noise. ⁠

Comments the band, “We are living…We are dying…With ‘We Are,’ a track bridging the gap from delicate electronic post-rock to noisy post-metal, we wanted to transcribe the emergence of a birth until a brutal and chaotic end through a winding and tumultuous life, it’s a tribute to all living things on earth. We are all the result of an incredible chance, and we are all the fruit of a delicate balance.”

Lost in Kiev by Stéphane Burlot
Lost in Kiev by Stéphane Burlot

Since the Paris Agreement of 2015, climate change has been a firm topic on the international political agenda, and one closely followed by the media. However, with the pandemic, the war in Ukraine and the recent spikes in fuel and food prices, media attention to rising temperatures and vanishing ecosystems has waned a fair bit, so it comes at the right time that the French quartet reminds us of these pressing global issues.

“Rupture is an album made to express how we feel about the breaking point between modern civilization and natural life,” explains guitarist/synth player Maxime Ingrand. “Planetary stability hangs by a thread because of too much consumption and other human activities, while many things (pollution, animal life, energy consumption) are at a tipping point. These are things that affect us and that we try to transcribe musically, both negatively and positively.”

These negative and positive poles are also found in the philosophy of Glenn Albrecht, the man who coined the title of the album’s first single “Solastalgia,” which could be defined as “emotional or existential distress caused by environmental change.” Albrecht argues that we can experience negative psychological effects from destructive changes to our domestic natural environment, but also that we can heal this damage by performing actions that heal this domestic ecosystem. This nature-versus-culture discourse also takes place on Rupture, where LOST IN KIEV creates moments of sublime beauty and rapture, that get distorted masterfully to create a sense of alienation and disillusion. These moments were captured in a powerful live recording session with Amaury Sauvé at The Apiary Studio in Laval. The live setting gives Rupture a directness which instantly beams your imagination to the main stage of the aforementioned post-rock festivals. Where previous albums like Nuit Noire (2016) and Persona (2019) featured a thoroughly produced tonal palette characterized by spoken word samples and the retro-futuristic use of synthesizers, Rupture has a rougher and more immediate sound.

The recognizable influence of Vangelis and Jean-Michel Jarre is still written all over this record, but in this live setting the synth lines of “Squaring The Circle” and “But You Don’t Care” come way up close, almost as if you’re there in the room with the band. What sets LOST IN KIEV apart from their peers is not only the perfection of their produced sound but also their composition and musicianship — on Rupture their experience oozes through the cracks. The confusion and dread are tangible in the lead guitar playing, the artful use of noise and distortion keeps you listening closely. While this album was still recorded with previous drummer Yoann Vermeulen, his successor Jérémie Legrand proved during the band’s recent tour with Maserati that he fts in seamlessly with his effortless and elegant playing. Each song is marked by a delicate balance between repetition and the introduction of new ideas, while every part feels appropriate and none of the musical ideas ever overstays their welcome. Even “Prison Of Mind,” almost a straight up melodic rock banger featuring Loïc Rossetti from The Ocean, amazes with its concise composition and creative use of vocal counterpoint during the song’s finale.

With Rupture, LOST IN KIEV has delivered another tour de force that surpasses their previous outings in many ways. Every song is pure melancholic ecstasy and rapture, while it also sees the band tread new ground. Going through various layers of dynamic composition, these nine tracks easily suck you into the band’s much needed narrative in which they lay bare their concerns and their anxieties. Rupture sees LOST IN KIEV at their most raw and authentic, and in a time where climate concerns need to be put back on the agenda, the album is a much-needed experience: a gripping portrait of mankind’s deteriorating relationship with its planet, this record will resonate with many fans of instrumental rock, both aesthetically and emotionally.

LOST IN KIEV: Maxime Ingrand – guitar, synth, Dimitri Denat – guitar, Jean-Christophe Condette – bass, synth, Jérémie Legrand – drums

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