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Kilsyth Currents with The Twilight Sad

The Twilight Sad emerged from Kilsyth with a dark, melodic take on post-punk, pairing James Graham's plainspoken Scottish vocal with Andy MacFarlane's seas of guitar noise. The core has evolved in recent years, with original drummer Mark Devine's departure nudging the group toward tom-heavy patterns, drum machines, and a sparer, colder thump. On stage the tone is heavy but human, big textures held close by steady tempos and clear phrasing.

From small rooms to storm fronts

They cut early material at Chem19 with Paul Savage, and you can still hear that decision to commit reverb and grit at the source, not just in the mix. A lesser-known thread: CHVRCHES' Martin Doherty once played with them, and that synth sense still flickers in the newer arrangements.

Songs that might surface

Expect anchors like Cold Days from the Birdhouse, Last January, There's a Girl in the Corner, and I/m Not Here [missing face], often stretched with noisy codas. The room usually feels mixed in age, with longtime indie heads and newer post-punk fans standing shoulder to shoulder, quiet during verses and loud at the breaks. Everything about potential song picks and stage feel here is an informed guess based on recent sets and interviews, and the specifics often change night to night.

The Twilight Sad Crowd, Up Close

The scene feels thoughtful and grounded, with black denim, worn boots, and jackets that look ready for rain even indoors.

Quiet devotion, loud chorus

You will see shirts nodding to Fourteen Autumns & Fifteen Winters or Nobody Wants to Be Here and Nobody Wants to Leave, plus a fair number of The Cure and Mogwai tees. People tend to hold quiet during verses and then let go in the big refrains, singing the vowel sounds more than the exact words. Between songs the chatter is polite, often about which tour they first saw The Twilight Sad on, or which version of a closer hit hardest.

Black coats, warm hearts

Merch leans stark and text-based, with those long titles wrapped around minimal photos and a poster or two drawn from grainy film stills. There is a sense of care in the room, the kind that makes space for heavy material without turning the night dour. By the end, folks tend to linger to compare favorite moments and to nod at strangers who seemed to be living the same lines.

The Twilight Sad: How The Sound Hits You Live

James Graham's delivery sits forward in the mix, clear and steady, carrying the stories without theatrics. Guitars favor wide, chiming voicings that ring into each other, while keys and synth bass glue the low end so the drums can stay simple and heavy.

Weight of sound, space between

Live, they often slow a song a notch to let the words land, then let the ending open into a controlled squall. A neat detail: Andy MacFarlane often uses open C or D tunings with reverse reverb, so notes seem to bloom a split-second before he hits them, giving that haunted haze.

Small moves, big impact

Arrangements tend to drop elements out for a verse, like muting the kick or stripping to guitar and voice, then rebuilding piece by piece. When the rhythm section locks into a tom pattern, the vocals ride above it like a guide rope, keeping shape as the noise swells. Lights stay cool and minimal, mostly blues and whites that rise with the crescendos rather than fight them. The result is music-first and deliberate, less about shocks and more about a long, deep arc.

If You Like The Twilight Sad, You Might Drift Here Too

Kindred shadows, shared pulse

If The Twilight Sad speaks to you, The Cure likely does too, because both draw power from chorus-laden guitars and a tug between gloom and lift. Interpol fans will recognize the cool, mid-tempo sway and the way barbed bass lines keep the songs moving under a somber top layer. Mogwai lands nearby through volume-as-emotion and patient dynamic builds, a shared Scottish knack for letting a phrase bloom into a roar. People who love Frightened Rabbit often find the same plain truth in James Graham's writing, and there is real kinship in the community around both bands.

Where moods align

The overlap comes from feeling more than genre tags, with steady pulses, cathartic endings, and voices you can believe. If those ingredients work for you, any of these shows will feel like the same long conversation in a different accent.

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