Home / Uncategorized / Bury Tomorrow’s “Forever The Night” Is a Dark Escape You Won’t Want to Leave

Bury Tomorrow’s “Forever The Night” Is a Dark Escape You Won’t Want to Leave

Bury Tomorrow are back—and they’re not just louder, they’re deeper.

Today, the UK metalcore heavyweights unleashed “Forever The Night,” a track that trades brute force for emotional reckoning. It’s their latest single from Will You Haunt Me, With That Same Patience, out May 16, and it dives headfirst into the seductive side of escapism—the highs we chase when we don’t want to face the lows.

Built on a haunting blend of melody and menace, “Forever The Night” captures that uncomfortable limbo between euphoria and collapse. It’s the sound of holding onto a feeling you know can’t last, and the way Bury Tomorrow balance that tension is what makes this track hit so hard. It’s equal parts soaring and suffocating, and that’s exactly the point.

The release comes while the band is deep in a co-headlining North American tour with While She Sleeps, riding the momentum of an already massive year. Singles like “Let Go,” “Villain Arc,” and “What If I Burn?” have already set the stage, but “Forever The Night” feels like the emotional centerpiece—less of a breakdown and more of a breakdown within.

After a few turbulent years of personal and lineup changes, Bury Tomorrow sound like a band who’ve rebuilt themselves from the ground up. The addition of Ed Hartwell and Tom Prendergast in 2023’s The Seventh Sun marked a turning point—but Will You Haunt Me, With That Same Patience is where it all seems to come together. Produced by Carl Bown (Sleep Token, Bullet For My Valentine), the record is shaping up to be their most sonically expansive and emotionally unfiltered release to date.

The album wrestles with themes of division, anxiety, and the relentless pursuit of inner peace in a world that offers very little of it. “To haunt is to revisit or recur persistently to the consciousness of someone or something,” says guitarist Kristan Dawson. “In a world full of distraction, discourse, and demand, patience seems hard to attain. In patience, there is peace—one thing society is short of.”

That reflection carries through everything we’ve heard so far, and “Forever The Night” might be the clearest signal yet of the band’s evolution. They’re not just writing for the pit anymore—they’re writing for the parts of you that still feel like they’re falling apart.

This is the next era of Bury Tomorrow. And it might be their most devastatingly human yet.

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