
Faetooth Labyrinthine Vinyl LP Indies Sea Blue Colour 2025
Tracklist:
1. Iron Gate
2. Death of Day
3. It Washes Over
4. Hole
5. White Noise
6. Eviscerate
7. October
8. Mater Dolorosa
9. The Well
10. Meet Your Maker
Los Angeles trio Faetooth sophomore album Labyrinthine is a deeply felt exploration of emotional weight: grief, memory, uncertainty, and the quiet work of growing around your own wounds.
Following the band's 2022 debut Remnants of the Vessel, which introduced the bandâs signature blend of heaviness and mysticism, Labyrinthine pushes further inward. True to its name, the album winds through a maze of feeling and form, where meaning is never handed over easily. Itâs rooted in self-discovery through disorientation, the idea that understanding comes not from escape, but from getting lost.
Ari May (guitars and vocals), Jenna Garcia (bass and vocals), and Rah Kanan (drums) manage to stay grounded in the immediate in parallel with fantasy themes of the band's namesake. Labyrinthine holds space for this contradiction; tenderness and intensity, restraint and release. The band's self-branded âfairy doomâ sound fits between shoegaze, doom, and grunge. It isnât just texture; itâs a framework for navigating the unsaid.
Like the myth that inspired its title, Labyrinthine doesnât end in victory, but in confrontationânot with escape, but with the Minotaur. Only here, the Minotaur isnât a monster. Itâs something quiet and more familiar: unresolved feelings, old memories, and sadness that refuse to stay buried. The album winds like a maze, sometimes heavy, sometimes hushed, always intentional.
Faetooth isnât chasing catharsis. Theyâre creating space to reflect, to feel, and maybe to get a little lost along the way.
Artist quote:
"White Noise" emerged from a diary entry, and is a relentless and intense reflection on inner turmoil. Weâre often drawn to the familiar, even when we donât realize weâre reaching out for it. It is an emotional upheaval, carrying harsh truths that weigh heavily on the heart. Guitarist, Ari May mentions, âPerforming the song always takes me back to a specific place, even if just for a moment.â
âRiffs and melodies brimming with loneliness and longing⊠this bandâs incantations affect my mood the whole day after listening.â â The Sleeping Shaman
âBringing otherworldly hazy doom goodness⊠dreamy clean vocals, echoing harsh vocals, entrancing riffs, meditative shoegaze melodies.â â Nine Circles
âSlow, lumbering behemoths of great weight⊠couched in [a] melancholy atmosphere and explosions of crushing heaviness.â - Where Strides The Behemoth
Original: $59.07
-65%$59.07
$20.67Faetooth Labyrinthine Vinyl LP Indies Sea Blue Colour 2025
Tracklist:
1. Iron Gate
2. Death of Day
3. It Washes Over
4. Hole
5. White Noise
6. Eviscerate
7. October
8. Mater Dolorosa
9. The Well
10. Meet Your Maker
Los Angeles trio Faetooth sophomore album Labyrinthine is a deeply felt exploration of emotional weight: grief, memory, uncertainty, and the quiet work of growing around your own wounds.
Following the band's 2022 debut Remnants of the Vessel, which introduced the bandâs signature blend of heaviness and mysticism, Labyrinthine pushes further inward. True to its name, the album winds through a maze of feeling and form, where meaning is never handed over easily. Itâs rooted in self-discovery through disorientation, the idea that understanding comes not from escape, but from getting lost.
Ari May (guitars and vocals), Jenna Garcia (bass and vocals), and Rah Kanan (drums) manage to stay grounded in the immediate in parallel with fantasy themes of the band's namesake. Labyrinthine holds space for this contradiction; tenderness and intensity, restraint and release. The band's self-branded âfairy doomâ sound fits between shoegaze, doom, and grunge. It isnât just texture; itâs a framework for navigating the unsaid.
Like the myth that inspired its title, Labyrinthine doesnât end in victory, but in confrontationânot with escape, but with the Minotaur. Only here, the Minotaur isnât a monster. Itâs something quiet and more familiar: unresolved feelings, old memories, and sadness that refuse to stay buried. The album winds like a maze, sometimes heavy, sometimes hushed, always intentional.
Faetooth isnât chasing catharsis. Theyâre creating space to reflect, to feel, and maybe to get a little lost along the way.
Artist quote:
"White Noise" emerged from a diary entry, and is a relentless and intense reflection on inner turmoil. Weâre often drawn to the familiar, even when we donât realize weâre reaching out for it. It is an emotional upheaval, carrying harsh truths that weigh heavily on the heart. Guitarist, Ari May mentions, âPerforming the song always takes me back to a specific place, even if just for a moment.â
âRiffs and melodies brimming with loneliness and longing⊠this bandâs incantations affect my mood the whole day after listening.â â The Sleeping Shaman
âBringing otherworldly hazy doom goodness⊠dreamy clean vocals, echoing harsh vocals, entrancing riffs, meditative shoegaze melodies.â â Nine Circles
âSlow, lumbering behemoths of great weight⊠couched in [a] melancholy atmosphere and explosions of crushing heaviness.â - Where Strides The Behemoth
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Tracklist:
1. Iron Gate
2. Death of Day
3. It Washes Over
4. Hole
5. White Noise
6. Eviscerate
7. October
8. Mater Dolorosa
9. The Well
10. Meet Your Maker
Los Angeles trio Faetooth sophomore album Labyrinthine is a deeply felt exploration of emotional weight: grief, memory, uncertainty, and the quiet work of growing around your own wounds.
Following the band's 2022 debut Remnants of the Vessel, which introduced the bandâs signature blend of heaviness and mysticism, Labyrinthine pushes further inward. True to its name, the album winds through a maze of feeling and form, where meaning is never handed over easily. Itâs rooted in self-discovery through disorientation, the idea that understanding comes not from escape, but from getting lost.
Ari May (guitars and vocals), Jenna Garcia (bass and vocals), and Rah Kanan (drums) manage to stay grounded in the immediate in parallel with fantasy themes of the band's namesake. Labyrinthine holds space for this contradiction; tenderness and intensity, restraint and release. The band's self-branded âfairy doomâ sound fits between shoegaze, doom, and grunge. It isnât just texture; itâs a framework for navigating the unsaid.
Like the myth that inspired its title, Labyrinthine doesnât end in victory, but in confrontationânot with escape, but with the Minotaur. Only here, the Minotaur isnât a monster. Itâs something quiet and more familiar: unresolved feelings, old memories, and sadness that refuse to stay buried. The album winds like a maze, sometimes heavy, sometimes hushed, always intentional.
Faetooth isnât chasing catharsis. Theyâre creating space to reflect, to feel, and maybe to get a little lost along the way.
Artist quote:
"White Noise" emerged from a diary entry, and is a relentless and intense reflection on inner turmoil. Weâre often drawn to the familiar, even when we donât realize weâre reaching out for it. It is an emotional upheaval, carrying harsh truths that weigh heavily on the heart. Guitarist, Ari May mentions, âPerforming the song always takes me back to a specific place, even if just for a moment.â
âRiffs and melodies brimming with loneliness and longing⊠this bandâs incantations affect my mood the whole day after listening.â â The Sleeping Shaman
âBringing otherworldly hazy doom goodness⊠dreamy clean vocals, echoing harsh vocals, entrancing riffs, meditative shoegaze melodies.â â Nine Circles
âSlow, lumbering behemoths of great weight⊠couched in [a] melancholy atmosphere and explosions of crushing heaviness.â - Where Strides The Behemoth












