
for the flesh and for the machine
Formed in 2023, and labyrinthine oceans have cemented themeselves in the UK Grunge-Gaze alternative scene. Taking influence from the likes of Radiohead, julie, and Deftones, Their second EP ‘for the flesh and for the machine’ tackles the omnipresence of technology, loss of humanity and the paranoia that comes with this. Finding influence in the likes of Radiohead, Deftones, Jeff Buckley and Title Fight, they twist the familiar sounds of the 90s alternative scene with something alien, drifting in limbo between organic and digital dreamscapes.
A screaming return to consciousness after a vivid dream state, labyrinthine oceans offer the titular single of their upcoming EP ‘for the flesh and for the machine’ - recounting an insomnia induced nightmare about being in a fatal car crash. Flesh collides with machinery and becomes one, holding a mirror up to society’s reliance on technology and the dangers of it becoming all consuming, eventually causing the end of everything. A familiar, nostalgic soundscape envelops the track, paired with walls of guitars and reverb stained fuzz, ending on the band’s harshest vocal display to date, haunted and etched into the listener’s spine. A darker warning of technological paranoia, surveillance and dystopia; which begs the question - will you accept the machine or abandon it? about the writing process: Something that has continued to occupy my mind is the omnipresence of technology and the present parallels to situations that are seemingly taken out of a dystopian novel, which I touched on in automata last year and carefully weaved into the lyrical DNA of our upcoming EP. There is this inherent paranoid feeling I have of being watched constantly, one which caused me to have these intense nightmares for a period of about a year when I suffered heavily from insomnia and this particular one of a car crash stuck with me because it didn’t end upon impact, but rather I felt myself becoming one with this machine that had consumed me - a feeling that does not feel dissimilar to technology almost becoming an extension of ourselves, humanised, normalised and expected to be used. A feeling of becoming almost less human for it. With for the flesh and for the machine, I lyrically tackle the feeling of almost becoming half machine, governed by devices and technology without an easy alternative path, the almost comforting reliance on tech and the impact of this on human behaviour and mental health. It sits in an uncanny space and it feels inescapable, everywhere you look there are screens, concrete, electric nervous systems made up of wires and husks of metal are granted artificial humanity. Rejecting it is not possible. The line between flesh and machine is increasingly blurred.
Tracklist
1. automata
2. for the flesh and for the machine
3. clipped wings
4. black silk
5. a trap
for the flesh and for the machine
Formed in 2023, and labyrinthine oceans have cemented themeselves in the UK Grunge-Gaze alternative scene. Taking influence from the likes of Radiohead, julie, and Deftones, Their second EP ‘for the flesh and for the machine’ tackles the omnipresence of technology, loss of humanity and the paranoia that comes with this. Finding influence in the likes of Radiohead, Deftones, Jeff Buckley and Title Fight, they twist the familiar sounds of the 90s alternative scene with something alien, drifting in limbo between organic and digital dreamscapes.
A screaming return to consciousness after a vivid dream state, labyrinthine oceans offer the titular single of their upcoming EP ‘for the flesh and for the machine’ - recounting an insomnia induced nightmare about being in a fatal car crash. Flesh collides with machinery and becomes one, holding a mirror up to society’s reliance on technology and the dangers of it becoming all consuming, eventually causing the end of everything. A familiar, nostalgic soundscape envelops the track, paired with walls of guitars and reverb stained fuzz, ending on the band’s harshest vocal display to date, haunted and etched into the listener’s spine. A darker warning of technological paranoia, surveillance and dystopia; which begs the question - will you accept the machine or abandon it? about the writing process: Something that has continued to occupy my mind is the omnipresence of technology and the present parallels to situations that are seemingly taken out of a dystopian novel, which I touched on in automata last year and carefully weaved into the lyrical DNA of our upcoming EP. There is this inherent paranoid feeling I have of being watched constantly, one which caused me to have these intense nightmares for a period of about a year when I suffered heavily from insomnia and this particular one of a car crash stuck with me because it didn’t end upon impact, but rather I felt myself becoming one with this machine that had consumed me - a feeling that does not feel dissimilar to technology almost becoming an extension of ourselves, humanised, normalised and expected to be used. A feeling of becoming almost less human for it. With for the flesh and for the machine, I lyrically tackle the feeling of almost becoming half machine, governed by devices and technology without an easy alternative path, the almost comforting reliance on tech and the impact of this on human behaviour and mental health. It sits in an uncanny space and it feels inescapable, everywhere you look there are screens, concrete, electric nervous systems made up of wires and husks of metal are granted artificial humanity. Rejecting it is not possible. The line between flesh and machine is increasingly blurred.
Tracklist
1. automata
2. for the flesh and for the machine
3. clipped wings
4. black silk
5. a trap
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Description
Formed in 2023, and labyrinthine oceans have cemented themeselves in the UK Grunge-Gaze alternative scene. Taking influence from the likes of Radiohead, julie, and Deftones, Their second EP ‘for the flesh and for the machine’ tackles the omnipresence of technology, loss of humanity and the paranoia that comes with this. Finding influence in the likes of Radiohead, Deftones, Jeff Buckley and Title Fight, they twist the familiar sounds of the 90s alternative scene with something alien, drifting in limbo between organic and digital dreamscapes.
A screaming return to consciousness after a vivid dream state, labyrinthine oceans offer the titular single of their upcoming EP ‘for the flesh and for the machine’ - recounting an insomnia induced nightmare about being in a fatal car crash. Flesh collides with machinery and becomes one, holding a mirror up to society’s reliance on technology and the dangers of it becoming all consuming, eventually causing the end of everything. A familiar, nostalgic soundscape envelops the track, paired with walls of guitars and reverb stained fuzz, ending on the band’s harshest vocal display to date, haunted and etched into the listener’s spine. A darker warning of technological paranoia, surveillance and dystopia; which begs the question - will you accept the machine or abandon it? about the writing process: Something that has continued to occupy my mind is the omnipresence of technology and the present parallels to situations that are seemingly taken out of a dystopian novel, which I touched on in automata last year and carefully weaved into the lyrical DNA of our upcoming EP. There is this inherent paranoid feeling I have of being watched constantly, one which caused me to have these intense nightmares for a period of about a year when I suffered heavily from insomnia and this particular one of a car crash stuck with me because it didn’t end upon impact, but rather I felt myself becoming one with this machine that had consumed me - a feeling that does not feel dissimilar to technology almost becoming an extension of ourselves, humanised, normalised and expected to be used. A feeling of becoming almost less human for it. With for the flesh and for the machine, I lyrically tackle the feeling of almost becoming half machine, governed by devices and technology without an easy alternative path, the almost comforting reliance on tech and the impact of this on human behaviour and mental health. It sits in an uncanny space and it feels inescapable, everywhere you look there are screens, concrete, electric nervous systems made up of wires and husks of metal are granted artificial humanity. Rejecting it is not possible. The line between flesh and machine is increasingly blurred.
Tracklist
1. automata
2. for the flesh and for the machine
3. clipped wings
4. black silk
5. a trap











