The Wonder Years Announce New Album

The Wonder Years will release The Hum Goes on Forever on September 23rd. Pre-orders are up.

Track Listing

  1. Doors I Painted Shut
  2. Wyatt’s Song (Your Name)
  3. Oldest Daughter
  4. Cardinals II
  5. The Paris of Nowhere
  6. Summer Clothes
  7. Lost in the Lights
  8. Songs About Death
  9. Low Tide
  10. Laura & the Beehive
  11. Old Friends Like Lost Teeth
  12. You’re the Reason I Don’t Want the World to End

Press Release

"I don't want to die, at least not without you."
 
Those are the words that open up The Wonder Years' new album, The Hum Goes On Forever. It marks the next evolution of a band that’s never stopped growing, never stopped striving, never stopped searching for the truth and the heart of this dumb thing we call life.   

On every level, their seventh studio album finds The Wonder Years facing an onslaught of things outside of one's control. It's a scenario that's only further exasperated by the fact that it's also the first album they've made since vocalist Dan Campbell became a father. So when he sings those first lines, they shimmer with a little extra poignancy and potency. Between pre-vaccine pandemic logistics, anxiety, postpartum depression, inherited trauma, and a band searching for their deeper existential purpose, The Hum Goes On Forever was undoubtedly the most challenging record The Wonder Years has ever made.

Named for a poem in the booklet for their 2018 album Sister CitiesThe Hum Goes On Forever is a self-referencing masterpiece, and it finds The Wonder Years at their absolute, unequivocal peak. It's a revealing representation of how the six members have all grown together as musicians; they know when to be restrained and when to explode, filling in space and emptiness as needed to create a record that mirrors the heart-torn urgency at its core.

New single "Wyatt's Song (Your Name)" is also out today––a song Campbell wrote for his oldest son, Wyatt. "It’s about the polarizing forces of love and anxiety that come with being a new parent—simultaneously being so overjoyed that they’re here, about the miraculous nature of their existence, but afraid of all the ways you could fail them," Dan explains. "It’s about raising children in a world that feels like it’s actively ending and how to make them feel safe and cared for despite that. It tries to breathe in the small, beautiful moments and exhale all of the invasive thoughts of despair."