Experimental metal band Kaonashi release new single from upcoming LP, I Want To Go Home.

Photo Credit: Dazey Doom

Hotly-tipped experimental metal group Kaonashi are excited to present their new single 'Red Sink, Yellow Teeth', the latest glimpse of their 6th June album I Want To Go Home., the brand new full-length (released via Equal Vision/Rude Records).

Pre-save I Want To Go Home. here: https://kaonashi.lnk.to/home
Watch 'Red Sink, Yellow Teeth' here: https://youtu.be/eFvUtPEM_oQ

Another blistering offering from the highly anticipated follow-up to Dear Lemon House, You Ruined Me: Senior Year - and the second part of a concept series that was taken through three additional companion EPs - 'Red Sink, Yellow Teeth' finds Kaonashi continuing to take their metallic and melodic tendencies to deafening new heights that defy categorisation, ultimately bringing its powerful and suspenseful, career-long saga to a close. 

Folllowing on from their USA headline tour, Kaonashi will be hitting the road in support of I Want To Go Home. across the UK and Europe with God Complex opening.

Dates:

03/07 Berlin, DE @ Cassiopeia
04/07 Velké Meziříčí, CZ @ Fajtfest
05/07 Stuttgart, DE @ Juha West
06/07 Ypres, BE @ Ieperfest
08/07 London, UK @ Shacklewell Arms
09/07 Newcastle, UK @ The Grove
10/07 Glasgow, UK @ The Hug & Pint
11/07 Cheltenham, UK @ 2000 Trees
12/07 Lincoln, UK @ Lincoln Labour Club
13/07 Exeter, UK @ Cavern Club

15/07 Paris, FR @ Glazart
16/07 Ghent, BE @ JH Asgaard
17/07 Tilburg, NL @ Little Devil
18/07 Arnhem, NL @ Uffie's
19/07 Bielefeld, DE @ Flacore Fest

Tickets: https://kaonashipa.com/pages/tour

Kaonashi’s music is difficult to define. It combines death metal growling, unexpected time changes and technical flourishes that bring to mind nineties metalcore legends like Coalesce and The Dillinger Escape Plan. However, there isn’t anything dated about the band’s sound — and in fact, there’s something inherently progressive about the Philadelphia trio’s unique brand of music. Although the act was started by vocalist Peter Rono and guitarist/vocalist Alex Hallquist in 2012, things really solidified for Kaonashi in 2016 when drummer Pao joined the band and they started touring all over the country, eventually gaining the interest of Equal Vision Records who released the band’s sophomore full-length Dear Lemon House, You Ruined Me: Senior Year in 2021. 

“[Conceptually], this album answers any questions anyone has ever had about the story,” Rono says, adding that the band’s 2024 EP collection - The 3 Faces Of Beauty: A Violent Misinterpretation Of Morgan Montgomery/A Second Chance At Forever: The Brilliant Lies From Casey Diamond - helps further expand on this compelling narrative. “It was written to be heavy, chaotic and overwhelming,” he summarises.

Since 2021, Kaonashi have toured relentlessly with everyone from The Fall Of Troy to Protest The Hero, a fact that has made the band sound tighter and more ferocious on I Want To Go Home.. “I think [touring] has influenced the record because we’ve been playing further out than we ever have to the most people we ever have and [getting] the craziest reactions we ever had this far from this band,” Rono explains. “I can’t help but take that into consideration when I’m writing because it's really inspired. Before I was just trying to prove to people that we were worth listening to and now we have a dedicated audience, so I want to provide the best music that I can.” 

That said, it hasn’t always been easy for Kaonashi to be a band that exists on the outskirts of so many genres — and at times they weren’t even sure if their message would find an audience. “I’ve been saying this a lot on this tour to summarise the band, but people hate what they don’t understand and I think that’s been extremely polarizing,” Rono explains. “It hasn’t been this simple, easy trajectory, it’s been love and hate. It’s been one or the other and I wouldn’t have it any other way. The people who do understand it genuinely support us and the people who don’t actively dislike us,” he adds with a laugh. “So I embrace it and I love it and I’m glad it’s been that way… it’s been equally easier and harder.” 

While it would be easier for Kaonashi to lean into an established subgenre, I Want To Go Home. sees them further pushing their musical boundaries and expanding their sound in the face of this admiration and criticism. So what keeps them inspired to continue working toward their unified sonic vision? “I don’t just go in and write a song, I go into it with aim and intention and try to emulate these things that I love,” Rono responds. “It just so happens that a lot of the things I love are polarizing artists that are creative and expressive for no other reason than just to make music that they like.” 

Whether it’s guttural screaming or fingerpicked guitars, there isn’t any musical idea that’s off limits to Kaonashi, and that phenomenon is ultimately baked into the DNA of the band. “It really just comes from chasing the same thing I’ve always loved and what got me here in the first place,” Rono continues. “That hasn’t changed and it’s been like a through line of this band from 2012 until now: Extreme art, extreme aggression and originality. I’ve seen the easy way — and that’s just not the way I want to go.” 

Kaonashi online:
Official | Instagram| Facebook | Spotify | Apple Music | Bandcamp | Shop

Track-list:
1. Confusion In A Car Crash
2. Fairmount Park After Dark
3. Extra Prayers
4. When I Say
5. J.A.M.I.E. (feat. Anthony Green)
6. Red Sink, Yellow Teeth
7. Slower Forms of Suicide
8. Fly On The Wall (An Orange Sidewalk Paved Around Your Feet)
9. Elephant In The Room (If You Can Keep A Secret)
10. The Sanguine I — Nevermind, Narcissist
11. The Sanguine II — Misguided Malice
12. The Sanguine III — Auditorium Annihilation
13. The Sanguine IV — Exit Pt. VII (The Confession of Classroom 2114)

Hold Tight!