SUNDECAY
THE BLOOD LIVES AGAIN
INDEPENDENT

Sundecay’s sound is akin to a slow-forming bruise: a purplish-blue darkness that blooms around the skin until it becomes impossible to ignore. While the Toronto doom outfit has always embodied this distinct tension between beauty and decay, The Blood Lives Again feels like a moment in which both forces effortlessly collide into one. What has surfaced is a listening experience that is heavier, more haunted, and emotionally self-aware than anything the band has released before. The Blood Lives Again treats its doom textures not as a genre constraint, but combined with its shoegaze accents, has created a blackened, dreamy, distorted, and heavily reverberated musical language for reckoning the emotional storms that live deep within us.
From The Blood Lives Again’s opening moments, Sundecay makes it clear they are not interested in the typical drag and monochrome despair the genre is often known for. Instead, its opening tracks, “Here Comes The Wizard” and “Silent Spoken,” display a record pulsating with atmospheric movement. Riffs churn melodically, not lumber, while its percussive elements provide subtle anchors to brace its instrumental force against raw, wounded, and strangely illuminative vocals. Such moments only build momentum for the tracks that lie ahead. While the first two experiences feel like one is drowning beneath the tides of emotional turbulence, “The Blood Lives Again” and “The Tyranny Rushes In” are the tracks that energetically claw their way out of the murky depths rather than floating above them. There is a sense of urgency within these two tracks, one that feels restless in spirit as it fights to push against the tenebrous weight of the band’s atmosphere, something that isn’t readily recognizable in the first listen, but becomes more apparent after a few more listens, and makes one appreciate their stylistic push and pull all the more.
“Will Dusk defy Dawn” creates a gorgeous, lasting impression on the album’s intricate tale of loss, rebirth, and the often ugly, scabbing truth that sometimes ruin and healing look about the same. Sundecay doesn’t try to paint a pretty picture of suffering; in fact, they catechize it. Each track, right up to the end, swells into a vignette of someone mentally breaking down, painful memories resurfacing, and old wounds refusing to stay buried. Yet what makes The Blood Lives Again so striking is that, even amid the album’s perpetual darkness, it never stagnates. Even at its bleakest, the album feels alive, like blood returning to one’s limbs, long thought numb and lifeless.
The Blood Lives Again is compelling not because it aims to be different, but because it finds a way to balance technical precision and rawness with such finesse. Its production is thick and pensive without oversaturating, allowing the guitars to flower into massive, textured walls while still leaving room for the bass and drums to flourish within that space. The band’s sense of dynamics on this album is sharper than ever, with its quiet passages feeling like suspended breaths, while its grander soundscapes are explosive in their delivery. When both combine, Sundecay’s sound on this album lands with imminent force.
Artist Links
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SUNDECAY – THE BLOOD LIVES AGAIN
Samantha Andujar











