Coheed and Cambria have unveiled a new track entitled “Rise, Naianasha (Cut The Cord)” [single artwork below].
Available today on all streaming platforms, the song finds Coheed and Cambria channelling their progressive roots and is accompanied by a lyric video streaming now on the band’s YouTube channel – Watch it below.
Coheed and Cambria vocalist / guitarist Claudio Sanchez elaborated on the genesis of “Rise, Naianasha (Cut The Cord)” explaining, “Rise, Nainasha’ explores the reach of love and loyalty and the reality that sometimes you need to be more than a shoulder to lean on – you need to become the destroyer.” “Rise, Naianasha (Cut The Cord)” arrives on the heels of the group’s skyrocketing 2021 single “Shoulders.
After scaling the Top 40 at the format since the summer, the recent single vaulted into the Top 15 at Active Rock Radio in the USA, marking the group’s career highest radio chart position to date and fuelling anticipation for a larger release on the horizon.
Sanchez recently sat down with GRAMMY.com for an in-depth interview discussing details of the band’s imminent new album while also examining Vaxis – an emerging central figure in the sci-fi universe of “The Amory Wars” – previewing his origin story and expanding the mythos.
Shoulders” shows no signs of slowing down either. “A total banger… as explosive and catchy as anything they’ve ever released,” declared Revolver, with Guitar World attesting “Coheed and Cambriahave come out swinging.”
Rock Sound enthused, “‘Shoulders’ presents all of the things that makes the band so incredible in one special package. Riffs that ratter your bones, soulful vocals that grip your throat and a chorus that is so catchy that it’s hard to believe it’s real. It’s quite simply epic and a welcome return from one of the best bands to build worlds with their music.
For the last 20 years, Coheed and Cambria have continuously broken the mould of what a rock band can be, forging their own path and building a universe around their music unlike any other.
Whether it is in the way their genre-spanning approach to songwriting has allowed them to bridge worlds without being contained to one, or the multifaceted story arc of their albums and comic book series which mark the longest running concept story in music, Coheed and Cambria have consistently shaped new standards, never conformed.
Shoulders” touches on the highs and lows of this journey, and how at times it can be frustrating to be an outsider to trendy circles, but in the end, doing it your own way has the biggest rewards.
It’s been almost three years since Coheed and Cambria’s 2018 album, “Vaxis I: The Unheavenly Creatures,” was released as the band’s “return to concept” album.
After stepping away with a more introspective album in 2015, frontman Claudio Sanchez and the band returned to the conceptual narrative of “The Amory Wars” in what was said to be the first of a 5-part series of albums. With the release of “Shoulders” and “Rise, Naianasha (Cut The Cord),” the volume of fans’ chatter for “Vaxis II” are loading up the band’s social media pages.
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