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Lost Foxes

Lost Foxes Rips Through Rhythmic Convention in His Electrifyingly Frenetic Indietronica Earworm, ‘Sirens’

‘Sirens doesn’t settle into the background of Lost Foxes’ sophomore LP—it crashes through it with the weight of unresolved emotion clawing at the bones of To Get Used to You Gone, an emotionally turbulent tour de force that holds no prisoners in the name of candour.

Duncan Therrell, the creative force behind Lost Foxes, has never played by the rulebook, and in his latest release, he doesn’t just ignore convention—he grinds it into the dirt beneath syncopated beats that rip through the mix like a live wire.

Opening with an alternative slant on Slowdive’s cuttingly angular guitars, the track teeters on the edge of familiarity before wreaking havoc on the rhythmic pulses. From there, Sirens swells into a new-wave synth anthem, its oscillating layers stacked with enough textural depth to pull listeners under, all while Therrell’s indie-pop-adjacent vocal lines bleed melancholy over the frenetic percussion.

More of an avant-gardist than an assimilator, Lost Foxes chips away at expectation with every unflinchingly unfeigned note. Then, the hypersonic middle eight obliterates all restraint, leaving only rubble in its wake and the mark of a true innovator.

Sirens is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Lost Foxes opened the mundanity trap in their installation of indie pop nostalgia, Petrichor

Lost Foxes elevated South Carolina’s indie scene with their poetically plaintive latest single, Petrichor. Hearing it, you’d be forgiven for thinking the past two decades have been erased by the echoes of the early 00s in the melodies that haven’t lost their ability to wrap a noose-like grip around the rhythmic pulses and pluck the heartstrings in time with the angular guitar notes.

The intimate lo-fi touches to the chamber string-accentuated release make it effortless to lock into the resonance that is strewn across the verses which reminisces on darkly mundane days as the instrumental effervescence lets the sun shine through the salvation of escapism.

The four-piece has come an illustriously long way since their early days of playing with loops on Logic Pro and singing about beans in 2020. Following the inspiration of Twenty One Pilots, AJR and COIN, they got to work on their debut album, Welcome to Kiff, which debuted in 2022 to tell the tale of three protagonists escaping totalitarianism. Petrichor is the latest chapter in the outfit’s legacy, and it is one you’re going to want to read time and time again.

Petrichor was officially released on September 29: Stream it on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast