(2024) DEFECTS - MODERN ERROR
BIO
UK Metallers Defects will release their profoundly personal debut album, Modern Error, on 24 May via Mascot Records.
Modern Error is breathtakingly raw with emotion. Conceptually, it is a deeply cathartic album that acts as a vessel for singer Tony Maue to organise his thoughts on the trauma of being taken into care at a young age.
Threaded through the album are the experiences that Maue has been through, how the five members of the band are all connected and why, at this moment, right now, is the right time for this band to exist. For themselves as much as anyone else.
This was the first time he could express these raw feelings in music. Scapegoat, Goliath and Echo Chamber are all about a family member but from different perspectives and Recurring looks at the mental loops that come with dealing with trauma.
All five members have their stories - Tony Maue (Vocals), Luke Genders (Guitar), James Threadwell (Guitar), David Silver (Bass) and Harry Jennings (Drums). Jennings explains his entry, "I'd stopped enjoying playing music, which I had dedicated my life to since I was 7 years old," he says. "It had all fallen apart. To feel like you've had a dream beaten out of you destroyed me as a person. It took me down a very dark path, and I did things I regret and am not proud of. I feel I'm in a position now where I can talk about it." "It took a lot of help from the people closest to me, and these guys threw me a life raft; I was sinking," he adds. "What connects us all is that we've all got our own stories, but in a different way."
Modern Error hits with the heaviness and aggression of Lamb Of God and Machine Head, a Linkin Park-like sense of melody, and a touch of Bring Me The Horizon's fearlessness. For all its heavy subject matter, it burns with vitality, power and passion. Woven within is their outlook on the world.
They flourished, catapulting them to performing at Bloodstock, 2000Trees, The Great Escape, playing with Bullet for My Valentine, Funeral For A Friend and touring with Of Mice and Men.
What do Defects represent? It's about believing in yourself. It's a message to people to give themselves a break occasionally. Jennings remarks. "It's fine to have bad days. I've had my fair share of times very recently. But y'know, everyone can pick themselves up, and go, I'm gonna do me."