AFI
SILVER BLEEDS THE BLACK SUN
RUN FOR COVER RECORDS

AFI has long been a shining beacon of boundary-pushing creativity in the punk and emo scenes, consistently refusing to follow the trends that the scene bobs and weaves in throughout the years. With Silver Bleeds the Black Sun, their first album in four years, the band channels their relentless spirit into a bold and defiant execution of post-punk, spectral lyricism, and shimmering 80s nostalgia. This twelfth release arrives at a pivotal moment, marking not just another milestone but a fearless leap beyond the legacy that defined them for over 35 years. AFI’s creative dismantling of their sound since the release of Bodies in 2021 is profound; yet this album remains tightly woven to the band’s roots in unpredictability and reinvention, proving that their signature defiance is as pivotal and intriguing as ever, three decades later.
From the beginning, vignettes of the band’s effervescent, experimental punk origins run deep. AFI stands apart from their genre contemporaries, weaving brooding introspection with a vibrant, lush soundscape and poetic darkness. The album opens with “The Bird of Prey,” a satin, polished track that signals the band’s fearless transformation. Echoes of Siouxsie and the Banshees, David Bowie, and Bauhaus ripple through “Behind the Clock” and the centerpiece, “Holy Visions,” where AFI trades some of their old rhapsodic energies for a moody, artful subtlety, using acoustic guitars, shimmering synths, and expansive percussion to create a cinematic stage for Davey Havok’s commanding vocals. “Behind the Clock” pulsates with animated energy and taut rhythms, while “Holy Visions” plunges listeners into turmoil before erupting with volcanic intensity and sparkling, ethereal guitars.
As the album unfolds, it delves deeper into darkness and introspection, exploring existential dread, pontific symbolism, and the quest for internal transformation in tracks like “Blasphemy & Excess,” “Speak of Truth,” and “Ash Speck in a Green Eye.” A cosmic unraveling threads through the record, as light is gradually overtaken by shadow, mirroring a world and its people spiraling from their own undoing. This motif shapes the album’s atmosphere—one that is always questioning, melancholic, yet occasionally illuminated by flashes of bright and boundless energy in songs like “VOIDWARD, I BEND BACK” and “Marguerite.”
Upbeat yet haunting synths bring the band’s metaphysical journey to a close with “A World Unmade” and “Nooneunderground.” As ambient guitars and lush, heavy synths swirl together, these two artistically defining moments end Silver Bleeds the Black Sun with a dramatic, chaotic flourish that feels like a punk opera’s grand finale.
Silver Bleeds the Black Sun is more than just a new chapter for these rock icons; it is an unfolding narrative of a band unafraid to reinvent the creative mold that initially granted them the success they have today. Although a few tracks occasionally stumble under the weight of their own ambition, the album positively stands as a bold testament to AFI’s unwavering artistic integrity. Those who are looking for nostalgic shades of Black Sails or Miss Murder might not like where AFI’s current soundscape trajectory is, but if given the chance and a few open-minded listens, the experience is a thrilling, spine-tingling reinvention that proves AFI’s courage to defy expectations and carve out new territory in their storied career.
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SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: AFI – SILVER BLEEDS THE BLACK SUN
Samantha Andujar








