056 :: LYF episode artwork

EPISODE · May 29, 2026 · 12 MIN

056 :: LYF

from The Year of Magical Listening · host Willie Costello

FEATURING A Wave That Will Never Break by WU LYF, released by LYF Recordings in 2026. Listen / Buy direct "Letting Go" "Love Your Fate" TRANSCRIPT It's impossible for me to hear this music without being brought back, fifteen years into the past, to when I first heard this band, and when they released their last record. The band has been virtually silent since then, and partly because of that, they've remained like a time capsule in my mind: a relic of a distant age, a reminder of years gone by, a flame that burned so brightly that it extinguished itself as quickly as it appeared. Yet now, against all my expectations, that fire has rekindled.To listen to this music is, for me, to experience a flood of memories rushing back all at once, a Proustian madeleine on my palate setting my senses ablaze. But the more I listen to this new album, the more I think that it isn't just me. Even if you've never heard this band before, their music has the aesthetic quality of a comeback, resounding with youthful exuberance and wistful yearning. And maybe this is what I loved about their last album, too: this music has always brought me back to an earlier time, even the very first time I heard it. No other music has ever made me feel so free.And there's an irony here – or is it a poignancy? – that, for a band that in my mind is so synonymous with youth, their music only gets more potent with age. To make music that sounds like this, in 2026, feels iconoclastic, an insurgency against the prevailing winds of our time – when really what it is is a resurgence, or reawakening, of a band that's lain dormant for over a decade and now just wants to keep making the same music they've always made. And when you're making music like this, I get it. This is all I want them to do, too.And it's fitting, that such liberating music should be so liberated itself, from trends and genre, from norms and expectations, from anything other than the drive to make this music exist. The lyrics couldn't be more explicit: this is music about letting go. And listening to this music, I need no further instruction. I am immediately released – freed from all else – carried by these waves – weightlessly floating on this endless sea.So what is it about this music? I've just spent five minutes describing how this music makes me feel, but how does it do it? I guess we need to start with the voice: a double-tracked snarl, awash in reverb, quietly screaming. It's the sound of a voice singing with all the urgency of the moment, the sound of a voice singing with all their heart. But what I'm struck most by is that, for all its gravelly roughness, this voice is surprisingly tender and vulnerable. If it sounds like it's in extremis, that's only because it's on the verge of breaking.But this music isn't just about the voice. I've also got to talk about the guitars. Just listen to this tone, so subtly and perfectly overdriven, a voice unto itself. And the bass, too, when you can hear it, is off singing its own song. And I know, these are some of the most basic pleasures of rock music – the rapturous electricity of these analog sounds. But it's refreshing to hear a band that understands these pleasures so well, and can deliver them to us in full force.It's also refreshing to hear a band that's unafraid to get a bit schmaltzy, as it leans into its chorus and its guitars give way to big chords on the piano and soaring synths in the background. Because really, this is music about big feelings, in all their rawness and enormity, and it needs a sound to match – even if, or especially if, that sound veers into the cinematic – because with some feelings, that's exactly what you need to express them.But the song has one last surprise for us: an instrumental breakdown, of the kind you just never hear anymore, one last opportunity for these musicians to revel in the pure joy of their instruments and just play, and dance, before burning it all to the ground.But this band is at its best when it's burning, a roaring fire of sound and fury, engulfing us in its flames and setting us alight.

FEATURING A Wave That Will Never Break by WU LYF, released by LYF Recordings in 2026. Listen / Buy direct "Letting Go" "Love Your Fate" TRANSCRIPT It's impossible for me to hear this music without being brought back, fifteen years into the past, to when I first heard this band, and when they released their last record. The band has been virtually silent since then, and partly because of that, they've remained like a time capsule in my mind: a relic of a distant age, a reminder of years gone by, a flame that burned so brightly that it extinguished itself as quickly as it appeared. Yet now, against all my expectations, that fire has rekindled.To listen to this music is, for me, to experience a flood of memories rushing back all at once, a Proustian madeleine on my palate setting my senses ablaze. But the more I listen to this new album, the more I think that it isn't just me. Even if you've never heard this band before, their music has the aesthetic quality of a comeback, resounding with youthful exuberance and wistful yearning. And maybe this is what I loved about their last album, too: this music has always brought me back to an earlier time, even the very first time I heard it. No other music has ever made me feel so free.And there's an irony here – or is it a poignancy? – that, for a band that in my mind is so synonymous with youth, their music only gets more potent with age. To make music that sounds like this, in 2026, feels iconoclastic, an insurgency against the prevailing winds of our time – when really what it is is a resurgence, or reawakening, of a band that's lain dormant for over a decade and now just wants to keep making the same music they've always made. And when you're making music like this, I get it. This is all I want them to do, too.And it's fitting, that such liberating music should be so liberated itself, from trends and genre, from norms and expectations, from anything other than the drive to make this music exist. The lyrics couldn't be more explicit: this is music about letting go. And listening to this music, I need no further instruction. I am immediately released – freed from all else – carried by these waves – weightlessly floating on this endless sea.So what is it about this music? I've just spent five minutes describing how this music makes me feel, but how does it do it? I guess we need to start with the voice: a double-tracked snarl, awash in reverb, quietly screaming. It's the sound of a voice singing with all the urgency of the moment, the sound of a voice singing with all their heart. But what I'm struck most by is that, for all its gravelly roughness, this voice is surprisingly tender and vulnerable. If it sounds like it's in extremis, that's only because it's on the verge of breaking.But this music isn't just about the voice. I've also got to talk about the guitars. Just listen to this tone, so subtly and perfectly overdriven, a voice unto itself. And the bass, too, when you can hear it, is off singing its own song. And I know, these are some of the most basic pleasures of rock music – the rapturous electricity of these analog sounds. But it's refreshing to hear a band that understands these pleasures so well, and can deliver them to us in full force.It's also refreshing to hear a band that's unafraid to get a bit schmaltzy, as it leans into its chorus and its guitars give way to big chords on the piano and soaring synths in the background. Because really, this is music about big feelings, in all their rawness and enormity, and it needs a sound to match – even if, or especially if, that sound veers into the...

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056 :: LYF

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This episode was published on May 29, 2026.

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FEATURING A Wave That Will Never Break by WU LYF, released by LYF Recordings in 2026. Listen / Buy direct "Letting Go" "Love Your Fate" TRANSCRIPT It's impossible for me to hear this music without being brought back, fifteen years into the past, to...

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