PSYCHOSIS
Mend
There’s a restless energy to PSYCHOSIS’ new single Mend that doesn’t let up. It doesn’t offer comfort or resolution, and that’s kind of the point. This track leans into the mess of it all: the fracture, the strain, the barely-held-together state of trying to move forward with your teeth still clenched.
Formed by longtime friends Rando Stipisic and Luka Mrduljas, PSYCHOSIS has been growing in the shadows of the Croatian underground, and Mend feels like a hard-earned scream from the middle of that space. The guitars come in thick and scorched, dragging an industrial undertow behind them, while the vocals hit like a raw nerve, not perfectly placed, but deeply felt.
Formed by longtime friends Rando Stipisic and Luka Mrduljas, PSYCHOSIS has been growing in the shadows of the Croatian underground, and Mend feels like a hard-earned scream from the middle of that space. The guitars come in thick and scorched, dragging an industrial undertow behind them, while the vocals hit like a raw nerve, not perfectly placed, but deeply felt.
There’s no sugarcoating. Instead, Mend pulls you into the kind of emotional terrain most bands avoid, the wreckage that comes before the rebuild. It’s rough, it’s cracked, but it’s real. The kind of track that might not be radio-ready, but ends up meaning something to those who need it most.
PSYCHOSIS aren’t interested in trends. Their sound threads together grunge, metal, and industrial noise without feeling boxed in by any of it. They’re chasing something darker, more personal. Mend is a glimpse into that pursuit, and it hits hard.
PSYCHOSIS aren’t interested in trends. Their sound threads together grunge, metal, and industrial noise without feeling boxed in by any of it. They’re chasing something darker, more personal. Mend is a glimpse into that pursuit, and it hits hard.