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ALIEN WEAPONRY takes aim at social media on new single '1000 Friends'

Photo credit: Frances Carter

21-02-2025

New Zealand modern groove metal trio ALIEN WEAPONRY recently announced their new album “Te Rā”, due out March 28, 2025 via Napalm Records. Today, following the release of the album’s first single, “Mau Moko”, the band returns again with the second  single, “1000 Friends”. Warning of the looming societal division and hidden dangers created by social media dependency, the track premieres alongside a brand new music video.

Watch “1000 Friends” below. 

ALIEN WEAPONRY frontman Lewis Raharuhi de Jong says about “1000 Friends”: “‘1000 Friends’ encapsulates the shifting way we socialize today, and the impact it has on the human psyche. We can often feel disconnected from the outside world. The human mind wasn’t built to comprehend the world we are currently living in.”

Watch “Mau Moko” below. 

On “Te Rā”, listeners can hear ALIEN WEAPONRY doubling down on the aggression in the verses before applying temperance, especially in the case of “Taniwha”, a death metal-leaning banger featuring the particularly raw aforementioned guest vocal from Blythe. Lyrically, there’s a noticeable tilt towards despondency, hopelessness, and frustration on “Te Rā”. While bassist Tūranga Porowini Morgan-Edmonds‘s lyrics in Māori on songs like “Tama-nui-te-rā” and “Ponaturi” draw from the themes of history, battle lore and mysticism that made the first two albums so rich, frontman/guitarist Lewis Raharuhi de Jong‘s English-language lyrics illustrate the impact when culture collides with disenfranchisement day to day. “Crown” and “Hanging By A Thread” take us into the headspace where struggle pushes people to the brink of desperation, while on “Blackened Sky” and “1000 Friends”Lewis addresses universal woes like the looming threat of World War III and the damaging effects of social media. On album closer “Te Kore”Tūranga dives into primordial nothingness at the root of the Māori origin story, while on “Mau Moko”, he finds the middle ground between these perspectives. Taken as a whole, “Te Rā” grapples with what it’s like to be caught in the pull of divergent cultures — not just for the descendants of colonized people, but for all of us.

ALIEN WEAPONRY have solidified themselves as one of the greatest young metal bands of their generation with renewed musical tenacity and crucial messaging. “Te Rā” is a bold, unwavering cry for a future in which we can all take part in the legacy of peoples like the Māori and others all around us – people who, if they aren’t seen, most certainly need to be heard.

ALIEN WEAPONRY frontman/guitarist Lewis Raharuhi de Jong adds: “We really stepped it up this time, as we understood that this album had to go further. We went through a lot of songs and scrapped entire sections of songs. We kept working them and working them until we got them right. Then, with the way we were pushing ourselves musically, I knew it was important to challenge myself lyrically as well. This time I delved into difficult emotional places and mental states. There’s a lot of existential dread running through the album, and I tried to find the right words to describe the indescribable.”

“Te Rā” track listing:

01. Crown
02. Mau Moko
03. 1000 Friends
04. Hanging By A Thread
05. Tama-nui-te-rā
06. Myself To Blame
07. Taniwha (feat. Randy Blythe)
08. Blackened Sky
09. Te Riri O Tāwhirimātea
10. Ponaturi
11. Te Kore

Henry Te Reiwhati de Jong – Drums, Backing vocals
Lewis Raharuhi de Jong – Guitars, Lead vocals
Tūranga Porowini Morgan-Edmonds – Bass, Backing vocals

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