Label: Dance to the Radio
Released: 6th February 2025
Remember when indie-rock felt like a secret handshake between friends who spent their weekends hunting through record store bins? Terra Twin’s latest EP, ‘Static Separation’, captures that same magical feeling, like stumbling across a long-lost record that should have soundtracked every coming-of-age film from 1995 onwards.
The London quartet have crafted something special here – four tracks that feel simultaneously fresh and familiar. Lead single ‘The Recogniser’ is an instant classic, the kind of song that makes you want to roll down the windows and drive aimlessly through suburban streets at sunset.
Producer James Dring has worked his magic throughout, giving these tracks a warmth that wraps around you like a well-worn blanket while maintaining enough bite to keep things interesting. The drums on ‘Again and Again’ hit with the satisfying crunch of boots on autumn leaves, while ‘Crooked’ shows off the band’s knack for building tension through carefully layered instrumentation.
Maxim Baldry’s vocals carry these tales of emotional deadlock and internal struggle with disarming directness. There’s something distinctly British about how they’ve absorbed their American influences – like Wilco’s midwestern melancholy translated through the lens of grey skies and corner shops.
‘No Ghost!’ closes the EP with the kind of crescendo that makes you wish this was a full album. What Terra Twin have created here is both a love letter to indie-rock’s golden age and a reminder that looking backwards doesn’t mean you can’t move forward.
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