THERE WERE WIRES Announce "Vessel" + Share "Massive House Fire" Video — WATCH + LISTEN


THERE WERE WIRES are thrilled to announce their new album Vessel. It's the cult Massachusetts post-hardcore band's first album in 20 years, and they return with a fully realized and evolved sound — rather than a nostalgic throwback.

The album arrives June 26 via Iodine Recordings. Pre-order it here.

The band has also shared the new single "Massive House Fire." Watch the video BELOW!

The track arrives fast and unguarded — a sudden ignition from There Were Wires that settles into a barely controlled burn.

"Immediate and merciless, no bullshit," the band states. "Huge riffs and anguished vocals dominate, briefly breaking to expose flickers of vulnerability before the flames close in again. The song is haunted by inevitability, the knowledge that nothing survives intact — 'No one's getting out alive.'"


VESSEL TRACK LISTING:

"All Paths Become The Road" 
"Massive House Fire" 
"Ravies" "No Dark Corners" 
"I'd Lock You In A Dream" 
"Unraveling Light" 
"Resurrectionists" 
"The Carousel Of Sickening Bliss" 
"1901" 
"The Vessel You Hold Dear"

There Were Wires formed in the late '90s and became a part of Boston's underground hardcore/punk/metal landscape. From tiny basements to big stages, they quickly gained notoriety in New England for their intense and chaotic live shows. Signed to Iodine Records, they released several 7", a self-titled LP, and 2003's Somnambulists EP before abruptly disbanding in 2004.

While the members stepped away into different projects and distant states, the friendship and connections remained. In 2023, There Were Wires reunited for a couple of one-off shows in Cambridge, MA and Providence, RI. What was intended as a single weekend quickly became something more, as the energy of playing together again made clear there was unfinished work.

Vessel marks the return of There Were Wires after more than two decades, capturing a band reshaped by years, loss, and persistence. From their genesis in Boston as a brash and chaotic hardcore punk band, TWW has morphed into a different beast — older, wiser, and heavier than ever before. The record moves elementally between caustic attack and contemplative restraint, balancing intensity with moments of space and reflection. Themes of fear, grief, and exhaustion surface throughout, shaping a body of work that feels both lived-in and immediate. Vessel holds the accumulated experience of the past, expressed with clarity and purpose.

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