Newcastle-based band Bosola are back with the release of comforting rock track ‘Comfort Disorder’. Bosola draw in their listeners with a soft and hazy rhythm and a subtle soundscape driven by warm tones.
The song was inspired and talks about “reaching the end of your tether in a relationship, washed up and burnt out, it’s time to split. The embers of the romantic flame that drew you together now hangs over you, stinking the place out. Surely it meant something, but in reality it probably didn’t! It’s an anthem for the cold light of day.”
The hazy alternative rock sound of the track supports its message, sounding like a slightly gloomy end of something you might not want to end. It translates the feeling of a heavy hard into a few minutes of musical bliss. ‘Comfort Disorder’ combines influences from Big Star and Big Thief, and slowly grooves throughout. The song features Austin’s kaleidoscopic range of guitar influences including some Frusciante-esque licks, a Mayer-inspired solo and finishes with the influence of the post-punk delay work of Bloc Party and U2.