
Suicide and Sunshine: Vinyl LP
Just like the title Suicide and Sunshine, Trophy Eyesâ fourth album is about contrast. About light and dark. About beauty and tragedy. About the full spectrum of life, as told through the eyes of frontman John Floreani. âItâs the human experience,â says Floreani. âWhat we experience and how we navigate it. The millions of tiny flashes of light that are memories and thoughts and feelings and smells, all those little moments make up a lifetime. Theyâre beautifully tragic because they donât mean anything to anyone, and on the scale of everything in the universe donât mean a damn thing. But itâs so beautiful that they happen in the first place.âÂ
Floreaniâs willingness to dive so deeply into the most personal parts of his life is matched by the bandâs desire to explore the very boundaries of the hardcore genre. Alongside Floreaniâs impassioned vocals, drummer Blake Carusoâs insistent rhythms, Jeremy Winchesterâs unflinching bass and the powerful guitars â handled by Floreani, producer Shane Edwards and former guitarist Andrew Hallett â the album is rich with anthemic hooks, dark modern pop (âMy Inheritanceâ), electronic flourishes courtesy of co-producer Fletcher Matthews, and atmospheric, swirling synths (âRunaway Come Homeâ and âSydneyâ). Â
"When we did Chemical Miracle, our second full length, the logo for the album was a palm tree and a noose. Thatâs literally suicide and sunshine. Itâs always been there on my mind. And I think I finally just phonetically set it out. That encompasses everything Iâve been trying to do my entire career.âÂ
Just like the title Suicide and Sunshine, Trophy Eyesâ fourth album is about contrast. About light and dark. About beauty and tragedy. About the full spectrum of life, as told through the eyes of frontman John Floreani. âItâs the human experience,â says Floreani. âWhat we experience and how we navigate it. The millions of tiny flashes of light that are memories and thoughts and feelings and smells, all those little moments make up a lifetime. Theyâre beautifully tragic because they donât mean anything to anyone, and on the scale of everything in the universe donât mean a damn thing. But itâs so beautiful that they happen in the first place.âÂ
Floreaniâs willingness to dive so deeply into the most personal parts of his life is matched by the bandâs desire to explore the very boundaries of the hardcore genre. Alongside Floreaniâs impassioned vocals, drummer Blake Carusoâs insistent rhythms, Jeremy Winchesterâs unflinching bass and the powerful guitars â handled by Floreani, producer Shane Edwards and former guitarist Andrew Hallett â the album is rich with anthemic hooks, dark modern pop (âMy Inheritanceâ), electronic flourishes courtesy of co-producer Fletcher Matthews, and atmospheric, swirling synths (âRunaway Come Homeâ and âSydneyâ). Â
"When we did Chemical Miracle, our second full length, the logo for the album was a palm tree and a noose. Thatâs literally suicide and sunshine. Itâs always been there on my mind. And I think I finally just phonetically set it out. That encompasses everything Iâve been trying to do my entire career.âÂ
Description
Just like the title Suicide and Sunshine, Trophy Eyesâ fourth album is about contrast. About light and dark. About beauty and tragedy. About the full spectrum of life, as told through the eyes of frontman John Floreani. âItâs the human experience,â says Floreani. âWhat we experience and how we navigate it. The millions of tiny flashes of light that are memories and thoughts and feelings and smells, all those little moments make up a lifetime. Theyâre beautifully tragic because they donât mean anything to anyone, and on the scale of everything in the universe donât mean a damn thing. But itâs so beautiful that they happen in the first place.âÂ
Floreaniâs willingness to dive so deeply into the most personal parts of his life is matched by the bandâs desire to explore the very boundaries of the hardcore genre. Alongside Floreaniâs impassioned vocals, drummer Blake Carusoâs insistent rhythms, Jeremy Winchesterâs unflinching bass and the powerful guitars â handled by Floreani, producer Shane Edwards and former guitarist Andrew Hallett â the album is rich with anthemic hooks, dark modern pop (âMy Inheritanceâ), electronic flourishes courtesy of co-producer Fletcher Matthews, and atmospheric, swirling synths (âRunaway Come Homeâ and âSydneyâ). Â
"When we did Chemical Miracle, our second full length, the logo for the album was a palm tree and a noose. Thatâs literally suicide and sunshine. Itâs always been there on my mind. And I think I finally just phonetically set it out. That encompasses everything Iâve been trying to do my entire career.âÂ












