🚛 - Pre-Order expected to ship May 2026
Forged in the space between discipline and volatility, No Grave operate with a singular intent—channeling the weight of hardcore tradition through a lens that refuses stagnation. Anchored in part by Rich Thurston, whose history spans genre-defining bands such as Culture, Terror, and Blood Has Been Shed, the band carries forward a lineage without being confined by it. On their latest full-length, Suffer Together, the answer becomes clear: this is not a revival—this is an evolution.
Suffer Together is a documentation of loss, betrayal, and suffering, but it’s less a collection of songs and more a controlled detonation built on blunt-force riffs, coiled rhythms, and an undercurrent of melody that cuts deep. No Grave have never sounded this immediate, nor been this locked in. Every passage feels deliberate, every note is earned—music that doesn’t just hit, but lingers.
Emerging from Ohio, No Grave draw from the foundation laid by Turmoil, Earth Crisis, and Poison the Well. What began as a raw, confrontational project has evolved into something far more expansive—without sacrificing the intensity that defined it. Years of refinement, both on record and on stage, have shaped a band that understands exactly where it stands and how far it can push beyond that.
Suffer Together captures a band fully in control of their chaos. Recorded by Shaun O’Shaughnessy at Encore Studios, guitars strike with mechanical precision, drums land with ferocity, and vocals—equal parts command and confession—cut through with unfiltered urgency. The record was mixed by Taylor Young at The Pit Recording Studio (God’s Hate, Internal Bleeding) and mastered by Brad Boatright at Audiosiege (Obituary, Creeping Death), reinforcing its balance of raw immediacy and sonic weight. Tracks such as No Grave and Lord of Envy strike with force, while Unrest and The Silenced—which features Pete Morcey of 100 Demons—offer moments where melody and texture amplify the impact rather than ease it. It’s within this push and pull that the band’s identity takes its clearest form.
For No Grave, Suffer Together isn’t just another entry in the hardcore continuum—it’s a statement of purpose. Lyrically centered on reckoning, resilience, and the refusal to break, the record confronts rather than postures, delivering something immediate and lived-in. It understands where it comes from, but refuses to be confined by it.
TRACK LISTING:
01. No Grave
02. Lord of Envy
03. Endless Blue
04. Scales of Justice
05. Freedom Dispenser
06. Stranger
07. Rotten Foundation
08. Unrest
09. The Silenced (Feat. Pete Morcey)