We are currently migrating our data. We expect the process to take 24 to 48 hours before everything is back to normal.

Data may be outdated

Last updated: 1 month ago — Click refresh to get the latest statistics.

The members of No Devotion have seen some s***. Permanence, the band’s brilliant debut album, was released on September 25th, 2015, to near-universal acclaim and heavy BBC1 radio airplay. That same week, their singer Geoff Rickly (of the band Thursday) was mugged and hospitalized on tour in Germany, the band’s record label collapsed, and the band barely made it through the remainder of the scheduled dates.

Nearly a year later, Kerrang awarded Permanence Album of the Year. It was the first time this distinction had been awarded to a record that was already out of print. Half the band took it as a bad omen and decided it was time to hang up their instruments. Rickly, Gaze and Richardson began to wonder if the album would serve as the band’s debut and swan song, both.
But in the following months and years, the three remaining members began to reimagine No Devotion as a personal laboratory for new sounds and a private vault where they could store some of their most personal experiences.
Things that must be expressed but that no one ever need hear. For the next four years, the band continued in secret, living the words of Fernando Pessoa, “When I am coming back from a trip, the best part isn’t going through the airport or getting home, but the taxi ride in between: you’re still travelling, but not really.” Creation was for its own sake.
Now they have decided to open the vault to the world and the results are blinding.
Who says getting sober kills creativity?

Monthly Listeners

4,551

Followers

16,138

Top Cities

200 listeners
70 listeners
70 listeners
58 listeners
50 listeners

Links