Lone Assembly release expansive and grandiose debut album “Knots & Chains”!
Swiss quartet Lone Assembly present their debut album, “Knots & Chains”: hymns of pain, alienation, and sorrow, certainly, but also of hope, strength, and courage. Cloaked in a gothic aesthetic, the record is a new wave/synth-pop exploration of control in all its forms: control exerted by others, cultivated within ourselves, and imposed by the places we inhabit.
When Lone Assembly released “That Never Happened” in early 2024, a debut EP paying tribute to a lost loved one, the band quickly became more than just a group of friends making music: it became a space for healing, a place of closeness, a necessity. And while this urgency was evident in the band’s first songs, it is even more apparent on their debut album.
“Knots & Chains” leans heavily into chiaroscuro, casting shifting light across songs born of profound darkness. Here, the band uses each track as a means to examine control in its various forms. First, there is the control that others exert, as in the unsuccessful attempts of the narrator of “You’re Pulling at the Same Strings” to understand the evil that dwells within the other: “I’ve been wondering where your ache breathes, in mazes you design?” Then there is the control we exert over ourselves, as in the captivating “The Pain Keeper” and “My Life’s Solid.” And finally, there is the control of places that also transcend us, as in “The City Works Like This,” where the city acts like a living organism, absorbing, rejecting, distorting.
While the topics addressed by the band are dark, glimmers of hope emerge here and there, in the form of a vital need for air, as is the case with the banger “In the Open.” “The album takes shape like a cycle, moving from suffocation to openness, from closed spaces to greater, albeit fragile, breathing space,” explains Raphaël Bressler (vocals).
Musically, the record is characterized by an eighties coldness polished with a magnificently modern production: you can hear both their admiration for the golden years of Factory Records and the pop straight forwardness of bands like Editors. Everything here is expansive and grandiose: the sound, the ambition, the power of the lyrics, the soaring guitars, every beat of the rhythm section. Raphaël Bressler’s voice leads the way throughout the tracks, captivating with its depth and gravity. The quartet, also composed of Glenn Le Meur (guitar), Jim Bodeman (bass), and Romain Segu (drums), delivers a debut album that cultivates both high aesthetic standards and remarkable pop appeal.
To support the album release, Lone Assembly are heading out on a UK tour this spring:
LONE ASSEMBLY, UK, Spring 2026
May 19th– Bristol, The Jam Jar
May 20th– Manchester, FAC251
May 21st– Leeds, Belgrave Music Hall
May 22nd– Brighton, Patterns
May 23- Glasgow, Oran Mor
May 24th– The Moth Club, London
Get tickets here: https://fanlink.tv/badapplemusic_la_rn