Sumac Announces New Album May You Be Held for September 2020 Release

American/Canadian post-metal band Sumac have officially announced their new album, May You Be Held, which is set to be released on September 18 of this year. This will be the trio’s first album since their 2018 work Love in Shadow.

The band is comprised of  guitarist and vocalist Aaron Turner of ISIS and Old Man Gloom, bassist Brian Cook of Russian Circles, and drummer Nick Yacyshyn of the Baptists. Although the trio has not elected to release the album’s lead single just yet, fans can expect huge variations in energy and control throughout the album.

“As an artist in this time of significant upheaval, society seemingly having reached the end of its current iteration, it’s of critical importance to absorb and interpret this process of dissolution – and of the transformation that hopefully follows it,” says Turner about the album. “While I don’t believe we’re on the brink of collective destruction precisely now, this is clearly a pivotal stage in the story of humankind – and there is something that feels right about this music at this exact and very uncertain moment.”

Turner released two solo albums of his own last year,  Interminable Conniption and Repression’s Bloom. Cook was set to headline Kuma’s Festival in June of this year, as well as appear in joint show with Korn, System Of A Down, Faith No More and Helmet in May of this year, but the coronavirus pandemic has left the music world idle for the time being.

Check out the cover art and track list for May You Be Held below:

May You Be Held track list:

1. A Prayer for Your Path
2. May You Be Held
3. The Iron Chair
4. Consumed
5. Laughter and Silence

Drew Feinerman: I have just completed my senior at the University of Michigan majoring in international studies with an emphasis in political economics and development, with a minor in Chinese language and culture, and I have recently been accepted into the Berklee School of Music's masters of music business program. Although my academic interests include economics, political science, and history, I consider music to be my one true passion. Music is, and has always been, a driving force for the way I think and act every day of my life. I have been playing the tenor saxophone since the age of ten, and playing an instrument at a high level has allowed me to only further my understanding and appreciation for music. While I grew up listening to predominantly classic rock, I soon found myself gravitating toward jazz, hip-hop, funk, and other genres, as my learned to both play and analyze music as a listener. As a writer, I am able to apply my skills both as a musician and a listener, and look forward to the opportunity to being able to express my thoughts on various stories in the music industry.
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