
New Miserable Experience "Gild The Lily" CD
NEW MISERABLE EXPERIENCE are a Philadelphia-rooted collective that reshapes heavy-music rigour into expansive, melody-forward songs through alternative synth-rock. What started as a file-trading collaboration between vocalist/bassist David Grossman (ex- ROSETTA) and multi-instrumentalist Joshua Mahesh Kost expanded into a full band that now includes ROSETTA drummer Bruce âB.J.â McMurtrie Jr., technical-metal bassist Brett Bamberger (REVOCATION), and guitarist Brody Uttley (RIVERS OF NIHIL). The group forgoes technical exhibitionism in favour of mood and melody, composing introspective songs designed to reward close listening.Â
Across the twelve tightly arranged tracks of 3rd album âGild The Lily", the band pares its palette to essential elements: clear melodies, precise dynamics, and richly textured production. The album trades overt bombast for craft, building emotional weight through small gestures and patient arrangements rather than moments of spectacle.
âWe started saying âinfinite sadnessâ as a bit of a catch phrase with the last album. I think that sums up the vibe of the album and project overall. We are very much in the âsadboiâ world with Jeff Buckley, Puma Blue, Radiohead, Deftones, The Black Queenâ, says Grossman.
Sonically, âGild the Lilyâ combines alternative synth rock with chorus-tinted guitars, and a rhythm section that alternates between taut propulsion and roomy, reverb-soaked space. The arrangements both electronic and instrumental negotiates smooth and slick danceability alongside sinister edges.
It is notable that there no real drums or percussion on the album. âEverything is programmed or sampledâ, explains Grossman. âI think that artists like The Black Queen, Depeche Mode, Telefon Telaviv, Bjork and Massive Attack have always been brilliant at using the percussion as a texture in itself. These are definitely things we are thinking about with our own material.â
Bass-lines provide melodic counterpoint as often as foundational support, and vocals are treated with restraint â dry enough to convey intimacy, but placed within atmospheric treatments that allow the words to hover. Lyric is delivered with a delicate, sombre intensity. âEndure loneliness with Grace, Build walls to hide the disgrace, I'm afraid of being of afraidâ (In the House of Denial)
Thematically, the album examines the tension between surface and substance. The title, âGild the Lilyâ, gestures at the impulse to embellish what is already whole, to lacquer over flaws until the original beauty becomes obscured.
âThe songs cover a range of topics but the idea of âGild the Lilyâ is trying to improve what is already beautiful or excellent. I took that as generally being a negative thing. Humanity messes with things that are already excellent, beautiful, perfect, etc and we ruin them. The song âPerfect Thingsâ touches on this topic the mostâ , Grossman elaborates.
Songs in the recordâs sequence consider different kinds of pain and hypocrisy â emotional varnish, social facades, and the turmoil that plagues our individual and collective experience. Rather than dramatize trauma or spectacle, the album focuses on a sophisticated expression of these cruelties.
However, as well as the personal, there is also the undeniable physical conflicts that haunt the realms of consciousness, the overwhelming futility of witnessing horror and injustice.
ââPayback from Godâ is a reaction to reading the book âOne day, everyone will have always been against thisâ, explains Grossman. The book is actually about what's happening in Palestine as well as the song. âOrdinary Peopleâ and âRunning the Fear of it Dryâ are the two songs that are a reaction to rich and powerful men trying to convince us that they are ordinary people and that empathy is a toxic trait.â
Each member of New Miserable Experience contributes a distinctive sonic fingerprint. The vocals act as the emotional centre, delivering lines that feel confessional and immediate; synths and guitars are constructed with shimmering arpeggios and decisive motifs; percussion and production choices blend groove and tension within electronic nuance; and bass work often functions as a countermelody, lifting refrains and anchoring transitions. Together the five players emphasise careful craft over spectacle, shaping songs that reward patient listening.
True to the projectâs collaboration of post-rock giants, âGild the Lilyâ also features Eric Nyffler (Jenny Haniver) on bass on the tracks âInfinite Sadnessâ and âRunning the fear of it Dryâ, as well as Chris Alfano (East of the Wall and The Postman Syndrome) playing bass on âThe Devil We Knowâ and âPerfect Thingsâ. There is also the contribution to samples and electronics on âYours to Buryâ created by Mike Armine (Rosetta). And once more Andrew Schneider (Julie Christmas, Ken Mode, Blue Man Group, Cave In, Unsane) mixed the record. âI believe that Andrew is one of the best in the world at engineering and mixing. He always elevates the songs to another level.â comments Grossman.
âGild the Lilyâ feels seeded from compact ideas and fully realised emotions, layered by hand and refined through repeated listening until arrangements felt inevitable. The record has a lived-in quality, drenched in internal depth, yet accessible and relatable.
âI honestly wanted really badly to write some positive songs for this album, but it felt insincere when I did. I don't think that I'm overly sad or depressed, but I seem to be drawn to sad and angry music. Not only from a creative perspective but also with my own listening tastes.â (David Grossman)
The bandâs aesthetic is one of deliberate economy: textures are chosen to serve mood and narrative rather than technical exhibitionism, and arrangements reveal their depth across repeated listens. Slick, sorrowful and cinematic in atmosphere, âGild the Lilyâ is an eclectic collection that can not only groove in vibe and inspire movement, but also pierce to the nerve in ethereal lamentation.
FOR FANS OF
Crosses * Black Queen * Ulver * Vowws * Rosetta * Revocation * Rivers of Nihil
NEW MISERABLE EXPERIENCE are a Philadelphia-rooted collective that reshapes heavy-music rigour into expansive, melody-forward songs through alternative synth-rock. What started as a file-trading collaboration between vocalist/bassist David Grossman (ex- ROSETTA) and multi-instrumentalist Joshua Mahesh Kost expanded into a full band that now includes ROSETTA drummer Bruce âB.J.â McMurtrie Jr., technical-metal bassist Brett Bamberger (REVOCATION), and guitarist Brody Uttley (RIVERS OF NIHIL). The group forgoes technical exhibitionism in favour of mood and melody, composing introspective songs designed to reward close listening.Â
Across the twelve tightly arranged tracks of 3rd album âGild The Lily", the band pares its palette to essential elements: clear melodies, precise dynamics, and richly textured production. The album trades overt bombast for craft, building emotional weight through small gestures and patient arrangements rather than moments of spectacle.
âWe started saying âinfinite sadnessâ as a bit of a catch phrase with the last album. I think that sums up the vibe of the album and project overall. We are very much in the âsadboiâ world with Jeff Buckley, Puma Blue, Radiohead, Deftones, The Black Queenâ, says Grossman.
Sonically, âGild the Lilyâ combines alternative synth rock with chorus-tinted guitars, and a rhythm section that alternates between taut propulsion and roomy, reverb-soaked space. The arrangements both electronic and instrumental negotiates smooth and slick danceability alongside sinister edges.
It is notable that there no real drums or percussion on the album. âEverything is programmed or sampledâ, explains Grossman. âI think that artists like The Black Queen, Depeche Mode, Telefon Telaviv, Bjork and Massive Attack have always been brilliant at using the percussion as a texture in itself. These are definitely things we are thinking about with our own material.â
Bass-lines provide melodic counterpoint as often as foundational support, and vocals are treated with restraint â dry enough to convey intimacy, but placed within atmospheric treatments that allow the words to hover. Lyric is delivered with a delicate, sombre intensity. âEndure loneliness with Grace, Build walls to hide the disgrace, I'm afraid of being of afraidâ (In the House of Denial)
Thematically, the album examines the tension between surface and substance. The title, âGild the Lilyâ, gestures at the impulse to embellish what is already whole, to lacquer over flaws until the original beauty becomes obscured.
âThe songs cover a range of topics but the idea of âGild the Lilyâ is trying to improve what is already beautiful or excellent. I took that as generally being a negative thing. Humanity messes with things that are already excellent, beautiful, perfect, etc and we ruin them. The song âPerfect Thingsâ touches on this topic the mostâ , Grossman elaborates.
Songs in the recordâs sequence consider different kinds of pain and hypocrisy â emotional varnish, social facades, and the turmoil that plagues our individual and collective experience. Rather than dramatize trauma or spectacle, the album focuses on a sophisticated expression of these cruelties.
However, as well as the personal, there is also the undeniable physical conflicts that haunt the realms of consciousness, the overwhelming futility of witnessing horror and injustice.
ââPayback from Godâ is a reaction to reading the book âOne day, everyone will have always been against thisâ, explains Grossman. The book is actually about what's happening in Palestine as well as the song. âOrdinary Peopleâ and âRunning the Fear of it Dryâ are the two songs that are a reaction to rich and powerful men trying to convince us that they are ordinary people and that empathy is a toxic trait.â
Each member of New Miserable Experience contributes a distinctive sonic fingerprint. The vocals act as the emotional centre, delivering lines that feel confessional and immediate; synths and guitars are constructed with shimmering arpeggios and decisive motifs; percussion and production choices blend groove and tension within electronic nuance; and bass work often functions as a countermelody, lifting refrains and anchoring transitions. Together the five players emphasise careful craft over spectacle, shaping songs that reward patient listening.
True to the projectâs collaboration of post-rock giants, âGild the Lilyâ also features Eric Nyffler (Jenny Haniver) on bass on the tracks âInfinite Sadnessâ and âRunning the fear of it Dryâ, as well as Chris Alfano (East of the Wall and The Postman Syndrome) playing bass on âThe Devil We Knowâ and âPerfect Thingsâ. There is also the contribution to samples and electronics on âYours to Buryâ created by Mike Armine (Rosetta). And once more Andrew Schneider (Julie Christmas, Ken Mode, Blue Man Group, Cave In, Unsane) mixed the record. âI believe that Andrew is one of the best in the world at engineering and mixing. He always elevates the songs to another level.â comments Grossman.
âGild the Lilyâ feels seeded from compact ideas and fully realised emotions, layered by hand and refined through repeated listening until arrangements felt inevitable. The record has a lived-in quality, drenched in internal depth, yet accessible and relatable.
âI honestly wanted really badly to write some positive songs for this album, but it felt insincere when I did. I don't think that I'm overly sad or depressed, but I seem to be drawn to sad and angry music. Not only from a creative perspective but also with my own listening tastes.â (David Grossman)
The bandâs aesthetic is one of deliberate economy: textures are chosen to serve mood and narrative rather than technical exhibitionism, and arrangements reveal their depth across repeated listens. Slick, sorrowful and cinematic in atmosphere, âGild the Lilyâ is an eclectic collection that can not only groove in vibe and inspire movement, but also pierce to the nerve in ethereal lamentation.
FOR FANS OF
Crosses * Black Queen * Ulver * Vowws * Rosetta * Revocation * Rivers of Nihil
Description
NEW MISERABLE EXPERIENCE are a Philadelphia-rooted collective that reshapes heavy-music rigour into expansive, melody-forward songs through alternative synth-rock. What started as a file-trading collaboration between vocalist/bassist David Grossman (ex- ROSETTA) and multi-instrumentalist Joshua Mahesh Kost expanded into a full band that now includes ROSETTA drummer Bruce âB.J.â McMurtrie Jr., technical-metal bassist Brett Bamberger (REVOCATION), and guitarist Brody Uttley (RIVERS OF NIHIL). The group forgoes technical exhibitionism in favour of mood and melody, composing introspective songs designed to reward close listening.Â
Across the twelve tightly arranged tracks of 3rd album âGild The Lily", the band pares its palette to essential elements: clear melodies, precise dynamics, and richly textured production. The album trades overt bombast for craft, building emotional weight through small gestures and patient arrangements rather than moments of spectacle.
âWe started saying âinfinite sadnessâ as a bit of a catch phrase with the last album. I think that sums up the vibe of the album and project overall. We are very much in the âsadboiâ world with Jeff Buckley, Puma Blue, Radiohead, Deftones, The Black Queenâ, says Grossman.
Sonically, âGild the Lilyâ combines alternative synth rock with chorus-tinted guitars, and a rhythm section that alternates between taut propulsion and roomy, reverb-soaked space. The arrangements both electronic and instrumental negotiates smooth and slick danceability alongside sinister edges.
It is notable that there no real drums or percussion on the album. âEverything is programmed or sampledâ, explains Grossman. âI think that artists like The Black Queen, Depeche Mode, Telefon Telaviv, Bjork and Massive Attack have always been brilliant at using the percussion as a texture in itself. These are definitely things we are thinking about with our own material.â
Bass-lines provide melodic counterpoint as often as foundational support, and vocals are treated with restraint â dry enough to convey intimacy, but placed within atmospheric treatments that allow the words to hover. Lyric is delivered with a delicate, sombre intensity. âEndure loneliness with Grace, Build walls to hide the disgrace, I'm afraid of being of afraidâ (In the House of Denial)
Thematically, the album examines the tension between surface and substance. The title, âGild the Lilyâ, gestures at the impulse to embellish what is already whole, to lacquer over flaws until the original beauty becomes obscured.
âThe songs cover a range of topics but the idea of âGild the Lilyâ is trying to improve what is already beautiful or excellent. I took that as generally being a negative thing. Humanity messes with things that are already excellent, beautiful, perfect, etc and we ruin them. The song âPerfect Thingsâ touches on this topic the mostâ , Grossman elaborates.
Songs in the recordâs sequence consider different kinds of pain and hypocrisy â emotional varnish, social facades, and the turmoil that plagues our individual and collective experience. Rather than dramatize trauma or spectacle, the album focuses on a sophisticated expression of these cruelties.
However, as well as the personal, there is also the undeniable physical conflicts that haunt the realms of consciousness, the overwhelming futility of witnessing horror and injustice.
ââPayback from Godâ is a reaction to reading the book âOne day, everyone will have always been against thisâ, explains Grossman. The book is actually about what's happening in Palestine as well as the song. âOrdinary Peopleâ and âRunning the Fear of it Dryâ are the two songs that are a reaction to rich and powerful men trying to convince us that they are ordinary people and that empathy is a toxic trait.â
Each member of New Miserable Experience contributes a distinctive sonic fingerprint. The vocals act as the emotional centre, delivering lines that feel confessional and immediate; synths and guitars are constructed with shimmering arpeggios and decisive motifs; percussion and production choices blend groove and tension within electronic nuance; and bass work often functions as a countermelody, lifting refrains and anchoring transitions. Together the five players emphasise careful craft over spectacle, shaping songs that reward patient listening.
True to the projectâs collaboration of post-rock giants, âGild the Lilyâ also features Eric Nyffler (Jenny Haniver) on bass on the tracks âInfinite Sadnessâ and âRunning the fear of it Dryâ, as well as Chris Alfano (East of the Wall and The Postman Syndrome) playing bass on âThe Devil We Knowâ and âPerfect Thingsâ. There is also the contribution to samples and electronics on âYours to Buryâ created by Mike Armine (Rosetta). And once more Andrew Schneider (Julie Christmas, Ken Mode, Blue Man Group, Cave In, Unsane) mixed the record. âI believe that Andrew is one of the best in the world at engineering and mixing. He always elevates the songs to another level.â comments Grossman.
âGild the Lilyâ feels seeded from compact ideas and fully realised emotions, layered by hand and refined through repeated listening until arrangements felt inevitable. The record has a lived-in quality, drenched in internal depth, yet accessible and relatable.
âI honestly wanted really badly to write some positive songs for this album, but it felt insincere when I did. I don't think that I'm overly sad or depressed, but I seem to be drawn to sad and angry music. Not only from a creative perspective but also with my own listening tastes.â (David Grossman)
The bandâs aesthetic is one of deliberate economy: textures are chosen to serve mood and narrative rather than technical exhibitionism, and arrangements reveal their depth across repeated listens. Slick, sorrowful and cinematic in atmosphere, âGild the Lilyâ is an eclectic collection that can not only groove in vibe and inspire movement, but also pierce to the nerve in ethereal lamentation.
FOR FANS OF
Crosses * Black Queen * Ulver * Vowws * Rosetta * Revocation * Rivers of Nihil















