
Poison Ruin - Harvest LP NEW
Poison Ruin - Harvest LP
NEW. ARRIVED UNSEALED.
Relapse Records
Philadelphia Punks POISON RUIN make their Relapse Records debut with their new album, Harvest!
Evoking a rich tapestry of ice-caked forests, peasant revolts, and silent knights, POISON RUIN stab at the pulsing heart of what it means to live under the permanent midnight of contemporary life. With Harvest, the band aligns their sonic palette to their godless, medieval-inflected aesthetic symbolism, creating a record which strikes with an assured sense of blackened harmony.
āIāve always found fantasy tropes to be incredibly evocative,ā vocalist Mac Kennedy notes, āthat said, even though they are a set of symbols that seem to speak to most people of our generation, they are often either apolitical or co-opted for incredibly backwards politics.ā
Kennedy reworks fantasy imagery as a series of totems for the downtrodden, stripping it of its escapist tendencies and retooling it as a rich metaphor for the collective struggle over our shared reality: āInstead of knights in shining armor and dragons, itās a peasant revolt,ā Kennedy explains, āIām all for protest songs, but with this band Iāve found that sometimes your message can reach a greater audience if you imbue it with a certain interactive, almost magical realist element.ā
The title track invokes images of feudal peasants, tithes, and money-hungry lords, sounding the horn of labor with the rallying cry, āIsnāt this our harvest? Isnāt this our feast to share?ā Tales of the undead rising to take revenge upon those who have unknowingly wronged them spin out like pleasantly cathartic folktales (āResurrection IIā), while other tracks address the profound beauty and spirit of those making ends meet in the forsaken ends of POISON RUINās hometown of Philadelphia (āBlighted Quarterā). The band stares into the abyss of modern living with a sober and empathetic outlook, portraying our cracked reality as a complex and difficult to parse miasma of competing desires.
With Harvest, POISON RUIN have constructed a richly chilling fable out of modern living. Their tale is as lurid as it is seductive, as much a promising fantasy as it is a dreary portrait of reality itself.
Original: $24.99
-65%$24.99
$8.75Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Poison Ruin - Harvest LP
NEW. ARRIVED UNSEALED.
Relapse Records
Philadelphia Punks POISON RUIN make their Relapse Records debut with their new album, Harvest!
Evoking a rich tapestry of ice-caked forests, peasant revolts, and silent knights, POISON RUIN stab at the pulsing heart of what it means to live under the permanent midnight of contemporary life. With Harvest, the band aligns their sonic palette to their godless, medieval-inflected aesthetic symbolism, creating a record which strikes with an assured sense of blackened harmony.
āIāve always found fantasy tropes to be incredibly evocative,ā vocalist Mac Kennedy notes, āthat said, even though they are a set of symbols that seem to speak to most people of our generation, they are often either apolitical or co-opted for incredibly backwards politics.ā
Kennedy reworks fantasy imagery as a series of totems for the downtrodden, stripping it of its escapist tendencies and retooling it as a rich metaphor for the collective struggle over our shared reality: āInstead of knights in shining armor and dragons, itās a peasant revolt,ā Kennedy explains, āIām all for protest songs, but with this band Iāve found that sometimes your message can reach a greater audience if you imbue it with a certain interactive, almost magical realist element.ā
The title track invokes images of feudal peasants, tithes, and money-hungry lords, sounding the horn of labor with the rallying cry, āIsnāt this our harvest? Isnāt this our feast to share?ā Tales of the undead rising to take revenge upon those who have unknowingly wronged them spin out like pleasantly cathartic folktales (āResurrection IIā), while other tracks address the profound beauty and spirit of those making ends meet in the forsaken ends of POISON RUINās hometown of Philadelphia (āBlighted Quarterā). The band stares into the abyss of modern living with a sober and empathetic outlook, portraying our cracked reality as a complex and difficult to parse miasma of competing desires.
With Harvest, POISON RUIN have constructed a richly chilling fable out of modern living. Their tale is as lurid as it is seductive, as much a promising fantasy as it is a dreary portrait of reality itself.












