Cold Gawd have often dreamed of escape. The Southern California bandâs singer and primary songwriter, Matthew Wainwright, has said that his lyrics on their 2022 album God Get Me the Fuck Out of Here came from a place of intense existential discomfortâthat after a lifetime of ignoring his issues with himself and the world around him, he felt trapped in âbad habits and old ways of thinking.â Desperation haunts the recordâs dense thickets of nervy distortion and anguished whispers; itâs right there in the titleâs prayer for deliverance. They wanted out at any cost.
Iâll Drown on This Earth, the bandâs second full-length, opens with a scream that suggests the intervening years havenât been much easier. Pained and phlegmatic, the opening moments of âGorgeousâ give way to a static-scoured ballad of what-ifs and couldâve-beens, with Wainwright murmuring about being born again into a better life that feels just out of reach. It only becomes more intense over the five and a half minutes that ensue, roiling and swelling into a crushing climax that recalls the stormy post-metal catharsis of bands like Envy and Deafheaven.
Sickly, overwhelming, and downcast, this is familiar territory for Cold Gawd, but itâs also one of only a few songs that hew so closely to the sludge-splashed shoegaze theyâve become known for over the past few years. Theyâve often expressed feeling hemmed in by the genreâas one of their T-shirts memorably puts it: âShoegaze is a prison.â And while Iâll Drown on This Earth does use tracks like âGorgeousâ to demonstrate their intimate knowledge of the soundâs grand scale and gloomy sonics, theyâre also clearly eager to push beyond it. Wainwright has said he intended this record to be more than just âanother âwoe is meâ sort of thing.â Instead, he wrote of tenderness and intimacy, the dawning of new desire, and the mutual dependence that blooms out of lasting love.
Though the scuzzy murk of Cold Gawdâs older songs is still present, itâs illuminated by a newfound serenity in the smeary synth pads of ââNudismââ and other similarly contemplative songs. As Wainwright sings of a figure that visits him only in dreams, the track burbles and laps in a way that feels pensive and surreal, a rare quiet moment for a troubled mind. âTappanâ is similarly reflective; the sleepwalking, loop-laden ballad recalls the tape-melted haze of Toro y Moiâs earliest experiments more than it does any of the punkish brutalism that informed their foundational work. Guitars stutter nervously underneath washes of spectral ambiance, distinct parts blurring together in foggy bokeh. Amid the fog, Wainwright whispers a vision of love: âI saw heaven in instances of you.â