Album

You Won't Go Before You're Supposed To

Knocked Loose

2024 · Rock

12 collectors on Gatefold own this

You Won't Go Before You're Supposed To by Knocked Loose

You Won't Go Before You're Supposed To is a Punk album by Knocked Loose, originally released in 2024. On Gatefold: 27 pressings tracked, owned by 12 collectors.

About

For their third album, Kentucky hardcore troupe Knocked Loose chose a title that resonated deeply with vocalist Bryan Garri. During an airplane takeoff that triggered Garris’ fear of flying, the woman seated next to him offered the comforting word, “You won’t go before you’re supposed to.” “The line struck him so strongly that it immediately occurred to him that it should be the title,” Knocked Loose guitarist Isaac Hale tells Apple Music. “It also became a lyric in the last song, ‘Sit & Mourn.’ Like the rest of our record, this is a collection of stuff from Bryan’s personal struggles dealing with anger and loss and depression and sadne. It’s a reminder to him—and all of us—that we’re still here. We made it through all the hardships that came with the past four years of writing thi.” Musically speaking, Knocked Loose entered the writing sessions for <i>You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To</i> with a very different mindset than the one that drove their 2019 breakthrough <i>A Different Shade of Blue</i> and revered 2021 concept EP <i>A Tear in the Fabric of Life</i>. “There was just way more pressure, and we had way more experience,” Hale say. “Some people view the third album as a make-or-break record. We had pressure from the fans and the outside world, but more so pressure from ourselve. We thought, ‘How can we possibly outdo what we’ve done before?’ It was tough, but I think we were able to come up with a record where every song accomplishes something unique.” Below, he discusses each track. <b>“Thirst”</b> “This was written in the first session that we ever had for this record. It was written before <i>A Tear in the Fabric of Life</i> even came out. It came from a jam session we were having where we wanted to create a really difficult song on drums to challenge our drummer Pacsun. We wanted something super short, super intense, and we just made it as complex as we could. And to start the record, it’s something we’ve never done before—a super in-your-face jump scare.” <b>“Piece by Piece”</b> “This was our attempt at doing kind of a Hatebreed-esque banger. It has a hook to it, but the hook is one of the mosh parts in the song, akin to [Hatebreed’s] ‘Perseverance.’ One of the things we wanted to accomplish on this record was to create stuff that was hooky and catchy, but at the same time crazy heavy. In many way, I think that it’s the most hardcore song on the record, and that’s what we love about it. It’s our version of a catchy hardcore track that can really connect with people.” <b>“Suffocate” (feat. Poppy)</b> “We wrote this song after we thought we had a finished record. Before we went to record, Poppy slid into Bryan’s DMs asking if we would be interested in collaborating on some music. Me and Bryan are huge Poppy fan, so of course we said yes automatically. That same day, Bryan called me like, ‘Hey, man—I’m coming over. We need to write another song.’ We wrote the track the next day, and it was one of the smoothest writing experiences on the record because we wrote it knowing Poppy was going to be a part of it. And because of that, we were able to do some sassy parts that maybe we wouldn’t put on a normal Knocked Loose song but that really work with her voice. I think it’s one of the most special songs we’ve ever written.” <b>“Don’t Reach for Me”</b> “This was our attempt at writing a song with a more rock- or pop-oriented structure. It’s different from stuff that we've done before because it has a slightly melodic chorus with a hook. It has a soft bridge with a jam part and some cleaner guitar. And a lot of it is midtempo, besides the very beginning. It only gets fast very briefly. That’s very new for u. There’s like seven mosh part, so we needed to balance those. It took a long time to figure out, but I think the final product really succeeds in that juxtaposition.” <b>“Moss Covers All”</b> “This was written in the second writing session that we did for this record, up in Michigan. We woke up one morning, started jamming, and we were just not coming up with a lot of stuff we liked. We were pretty much just throwing paint at the wall and getting aggravated. When we took a break, I had an idea and basically wrote this entire song in my head in about a minute. I voice memo’d it briefly on my phone and then immediately started putting it down without telling the guy. When they came back, I played it for them—and what I played is pretty much exactly what’s on the record. It’s short, sweet, and super heavy, with a breakdown and a spooky lead that goes directly into the next song.” <b>“Take Me Home”</b> “‘Moss Covers All’ and ‘Take Me Home’ are very much connected song. ‘Moss Covers All’ was written first, but then we really felt the need to have a song on here that’s meant to scare you. We didn’t worry about a mosh part or any sort of heavine. We just wanted a scary track that’s uncomfortable and throws the listener off guard. When we were thinking about what shape that could take, I immediately thought of that spooky lead from ‘Moss Covers All,’ which we ended up looping as the blueprint for this track.” <b>“Slaughterhouse 2” (feat. Chris Motionless)</b> “This song started as an inside joke because Motionless in White was kind enough to reach out to Bryan and have him collaborate on one of their song, ’Slaughterhouse,’ a very heavy, politically charged track. We’re all huge Motionless in White fan, so of course he accepted. And then we were able to tour with them. As soon as Bryan did that track, we were joking that we should do a song called ‘Slaughterhouse 2.’ We were just kind of laughing about it for a while, but then we thought we were kind of shooting ourselves in the foot if we didn’t do it. Chris was down from the beginning, and his voice is amazing on thi. It was a challenge to match the theme and vibe of the original song, but I think we were able to create something that’s not just a great sequel, but that really stands on its own as a highlight of the record.” <b>“The Calm That Keeps You Awake”</b> “The funny thing about this one is that the song totally revolves around the huge breakdown at the end. That part was written first, as part of another thing that was written before <i>A Tear in the Fabric</i> had even come out. So, like four years ago, we needed to write new parts because the rest of the song we’d written wasn’t up to par, but that breakdown was super necessary. In doing so, we created this really cool, Meshuggah-esque, kind of Sepultura-auxiliary-percussion vibe that’s one of the most unique parts of the record.” <b>“Blinding Faith”</b> “We definitely have some jabs at religious hypocrisy throughout the Knocked Loose discography, and this is just kind of an update on that situation. We hadn't done one in a while, and it was something that was feeling close to home for Bryan at the time. To me, this sounds like a mix of some of our greatest riffs that we’d written over the course of a year—it’s kind of a riff-salad song. In some way, it’s one of the heaviest and scariest songs on the record, so we put it out as a single to say, ‘If you thought we were going to get any softer, absolutely not. And here’s proof.’” <b>“Sit & Mourn”</b> .

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. 1Thirst1:46
  2. 2Piece By Piece2:51
  3. 3Suffocate (feat. Poppy)2:44
  4. 4Don't Reach For Me3:45
  5. 5Moss Covers All0:46
  6. 6Take Me Home2:15
  7. 7Slaughterhouse 2 (feat. Chris Motionless)3:03
  8. 8The Calm That Keeps You Awake2:41
  9. 9Blinding Faith2:51
  10. 10Sit & Mourn4:46

Sound DNA

  • Punk
  • Hardcore
  • aggressive

Credits

The people behind it.

Performers

12 collectors on Gatefold own this · 27 pressings tracked on Gatefold

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