Last updated: 5 hours ago
The Coffin Kids rose quietly out of Ontario’s underground, carrying with them a world that blurs metal, industrial atmosphere, electronic production, and ghost stories. Every release is part of a much larger universe built from an original graphic novel they have written. Each single is only a fragment, and the full meaning will not reveal itself until the complete album is heard from beginning to end.
One of the stories shaping their world is "Nothing Grows Here". Set in the 1940s, it follows a farmer whose drunken mistake kills his young son. In panic he hides the body in the old well, but the land refuses to stay quiet. Something begins to move in the corners of the property. The mother hears the boy calling from the woods and slowly unravels until she takes her own life among the trees. The father burns the home to silence the haunting, but officers later find all three bodies gathered strangely together in the ash, as if the farm itself arranged them.
The Coffin Kids write stories with far more characters than their two voices could ever portray, so they use a mix of their own vocals, guest vocals and electronic vocal creation. Some characters are performed directly and then reshaped through distortion, pitch work, and atmosphere. Others are built through careful sampling and artificial vocal design, transformed in post production until they feel like spirits that belong to the world they created for the stories they haunt.
One of the stories shaping their world is "Nothing Grows Here". Set in the 1940s, it follows a farmer whose drunken mistake kills his young son. In panic he hides the body in the old well, but the land refuses to stay quiet. Something begins to move in the corners of the property. The mother hears the boy calling from the woods and slowly unravels until she takes her own life among the trees. The father burns the home to silence the haunting, but officers later find all three bodies gathered strangely together in the ash, as if the farm itself arranged them.
The Coffin Kids write stories with far more characters than their two voices could ever portray, so they use a mix of their own vocals, guest vocals and electronic vocal creation. Some characters are performed directly and then reshaped through distortion, pitch work, and atmosphere. Others are built through careful sampling and artificial vocal design, transformed in post production until they feel like spirits that belong to the world they created for the stories they haunt.
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