California's ATREYU has announced its new studio album "The End Is Not The End", set for release on April 24 via Spinefarm.
This marks the band's long-awaited tenth studio album and their heaviest work to date.
To coincide with the announcement, ATREYU has shared the new track "All For You", alongside an official music video.
On the new single "All For You", ATREYU comments: "It's hard to give someone what they want or need when they don't know what that thing is.
It's hard to love someone who doesn't love themselves." According to frontman Brandon Saller, ATREYU realized their unique sound through creative experimentation.
The band members created several of the album's songs during a series of improvisational sessions in Tokyo and on San Juan Island off the coast of Washington.
The result is an album that feels simultaneously classic and unfamiliar, aggressive and unselfconscious, deeply emotional and unconcerned with trends.
Produced by Matt Pauling, ATREYU's tenth album is vibrant, inventive, and beautifully aggressive.
"The End Is Not The End" track listing includes "Dead", "Ghost In Me", "Children Of Light" (featuring Max Cavalera) and "Afterglow".
ATREYU will embark on a spring tour supporting SEVENDUST, kicking off April 20 in Indianapolis, Indiana before concluding in Knoxville, Tennessee on May 20.
ATREYU's riffs, hooks, melodies, and relentless energy remain a driving force in heavy music, with over a billion streams worldwide and a fanbase that keeps growing.
The Southern California band recently wrapped a triumphant co-headlining U.S.
run and tore through massive festivals like Download, Hellfest, Welcome To Rockville and Inkcarceration.
Since forming around the turn of the millennium, ATREYU has pushed well beyond its DIY roots — earning multiple RIAA gold records, Top 20 Billboard 200 debuts, and spots on major film and video-game soundtracks.
Their latest album, "The Beautiful Dark Of Life" (2023, Spinefarm), debuted in the Top 10 on Billboard's Top Hard Rock Albums and has already racked up over 75 million streams.