REVIEW: In Another Life, Exhimusic
/June 8, 2026 | Exhimusic - Journeys Through Music
Deardarkhead shares “In Another Life”, marking a stunning return after 26 years in the shadows.
After more than two decades between full-length albums, New Jersey’s Deardarkhead return with “In Another Life,” a stirring instrumental shoegaze journey that proves some bands don’t simply survive the passage of time—they deepen because of it.
Serving as the second preview from the forthcoming album The Pendulum Swings, the track finds Deardarkhead refining the atmospheric sound they’ve spent decades cultivating. Without relying on vocals, the trio crafts a narrative entirely through texture, dynamics, and emotional resonance, creating a piece that feels both intensely personal and universally relatable.
“In Another Life” opens with crystalline guitar arpeggios that immediately evoke the dreamlike qualities of classic shoegaze and post-punk pioneers. As the arrangement unfolds, shimmering melodies collide with walls of fuzz-drenched tremolo, while a melodic bass foundation anchors the song’s drifting emotional currents. The result is a lush, cinematic soundscape that recalls influences such as Ride, Slowdive, Lush, and Kitchens of Distinction, while maintaining a distinct identity forged through years of evolution.
What makes the track particularly compelling is its sense of movement. Rather than settling into a single mood, the song gradually builds and recedes like memory itself, mirroring drummer Robert Weiss’s thematic inspiration: the lingering fascination with paths not taken. The composition captures that bittersweet tension between reflection and acceptance, suggesting alternate futures without becoming trapped by them.
Kevin Harrington’s guitar work is especially noteworthy, weaving soaring lead lines through layers of atmospheric effects with remarkable restraint. The band’s chemistry shines throughout, balancing expansive shoegaze textures with the rhythmic drive and melodic precision more commonly associated with classic post-punk. Hints of The Cure, The Chameleons, Echo & the Bunnymen, and Cocteau Twins emerge organically within the arrangement, yet never feel derivative.
The production team of Brian McTear and Amy Morrissey brings impressive clarity to the dense instrumentation. Every layer occupies its own space, allowing the song’s intricate details to emerge with repeated listens. The mastering by Joe Lambert further enhances the track’s expansive character, giving it both warmth and breadth without sacrificing impact.
Perhaps the greatest achievement of “In Another Life” is its ability to communicate so much without a single lyric. Deardarkhead have embraced their instrumental identity completely, allowing melody and atmosphere to carry emotional weight where words might otherwise reside. A captivating instrumental meditation on possibility, memory, and acceptance, the song showcases Deardarkhead at their most immersive and emotionally resonant, inviting listeners to project their own experiences and interpretations onto its sweeping sonic landscape.
As a preview of The Pendulum Swings, “In Another Life” suggests that Deardarkhead’s first album in 26 years will be more than a nostalgic return. Instead, it feels like the work of a band that has spent decades refining its voice, emerging with renewed purpose and creative confidence. Rich in atmosphere, emotionally evocative, and beautifully crafted, “In Another Life” stands as a compelling statement from a band whose creative momentum shows no signs of slowing.
As of June 9, ‘In Another Life’ is available from music platforms, including Spotify, Apple Music and Bandcamp. Now available for pre-order, ‘The Pendulum Swings’ album will be released on CD, digitally, and on 180-gram vinyl on July 10.
