Feel The Void

Equal Vision Records and acclaimed American punk band Hot Water Music are excited to announce the Friday, March 18, 2022 release of the band’s brand new studio album, Feel The Void. Featuring the return of producer Brian McTernan (Turnstile, Converge, Thrice, Texas is the Reason), Feel The Void offers up a torrent of resilience that strives for light in the context of personal and global darkness across its 12 energetic and impassioned songs. 

"Killing Time,” Feel The Void’s first single, is a direct response to the endless daily bombardment of negative information we found ourselves in the midst of during the early days of the pandemic. The song is a letting-out of pent-up frustration and negativity in the most positive way — through music. 

In 2017, Hot Water Music vocalist/guitarist Chris Wollard stepped away from playing live with the band in order to focus on his mental health. While the other members – Chuck Ragan (vocals/guitar), Jason Black (bass) and George Rebelo (drums) – understood and supported his decision, it did nevertheless bring the future of the band into question. After a chance encounter between Rebelo and The Flatliners’ Chris Cresswell, Cresswell ended up stepping into Wollard’s shoes for a performance at The Fest that year, which would eventually lead to him becoming a permanent member (with Wollard continuing to record with the band).

Recorded at Black Bear Studios in Gainesville, FL, Feel The Void marks the return of producer Brian McTernan, who worked with the band on 2001’s A Flight And A Crash, 2002’s Caution and 2004’s The New What Next, often thought of as Hot Water Music’s classic period. From the moment the dark, portentous intensity of “Another Breath” kicks the record off, it’s clear that this is a band at the peak of their powers. McTernan’s involvement was incredibly instrumental in channeling that spirit and energy – the intense urgency of “Killing Time, “Newtown Scraper” and “Scratch On,” the nervous but positive emotional energy of “Hearts Stay Full” and the title track, the soaring chorus of “The Weeds,” the surging, powerful roar of closer “Lock Up.”

Feel The Void also finds Wollard and Ragan singing dual vocals again – and to devastating effect – something that should definitely please longtime fans of the band. Yet these aren’t songs that just recall the glories of the past with a fervent zeal. They also add a brand new dynamic to the band – just listen to the shimmering, spiky vitality of “Collect Your Things And Run” or the bristling, angular effervescence of “Turn The Dial,” which sees Cresswell on lead vocal duties. Encapsulating the essence of Feel The Void, however, is the touching “Habitual,” a song written about those who have suffered from and/or succumbed to cancer, and a track that is quite possibly the most personal song Ragan has ever penned. “The song is very much about just the fight,” he says, “using that will to carry on, and using whatever it is that’s inside us that obviously has the power to heal.”

Ultimately, it’s this spirit of perseverance, defiance and hope that defines this record, and which also demonstrates how steadfast Hot Water Music has remained in its beliefs and ideas. The world might have changed drastically in the past 25 or so years, but the reason why the band makes music has remained exactly the same as it ever was. What’s more, that music is just as powerful, vital and full of meaning as it ever was, and just as effective at counteracting the emptiness, pain and suffering that, sadly, is an inherent part of life.

“This is so much more than just a band,” says Ragan. “A lot of people understood a long time ago that we, the band, used Hot Water Music as a vehicle for our own therapy, to help get over these barriers and be able to continue when we’re feeling at our lowest, or feeling like the rest of the world is against us. Years ago, that was the choice that we made as a band – that it’s not about being popular or making money or seeing your name on a marquee. This is a way for us to release all this angst and inspiration and positivity, and share music that drives us to become better people, better friends and better communities. It literally started with four of us, and over the years it became so much more than just a band – and I’m just so incredibly honored to be a piece of this puzzle.”

Reviews of Feel The Void on Release Wave

Hot Water Music release one of the best albums of their career - Feel the Void - album review

After an impressive 25+ year career, the original and seminal Gainsville, FL beard-core/gruff punks Hot Water Music, may have released one of the best albums of their career. The 5-year gap between albums has certainly paid off, with a full return to form, and songs that are equally as heavy, groove-laden and technical, as they are melodic, anthemic, and poppy, all in classic HWM fashion. Their trademark trade-off vocals are in full effect, not only between Chuck Ragan and Chris Wollard, but also with new addition and now official member Chris Cresswell, also of The Flatliners. His added vocals are a welcome addition and fit perfectly into the fold, adding solid harmonies and back-ups to the already impressive duo of Ragan and Wollard. However, where Cresswell really shines is on what could be considered the biggest sounding song of HWMs illustrious career. On “Turn The Dial”, Cresswell takes on the lead vocal part during the main verse of the song, which builds up to a monster chorus with all 3 vocalists yelling "Turn the dial for nothing. Yeah, I turn the dial for nothing. So I turn it off, turn it off, turn it off" repeatedly, in full on sing-along fashion. This climatic song is sure to be stuck in your head forever, and is a masterclass in how to fire up the mosh pit with a fist in the air sing-along anthem, containing one of the catchiest choruses I’ve heard in years. There’s so much to say about “Feel The Void”, while every song brings something unique and instantly accessible to the table, with songs like “Habitual”, “Collect your Things and Run” and “The Weeds” being a few of my favorites. And as always, the low end featuring Jason Black’s groovy bass lines are tightly locked in with George Rebelo’s hard hitting beats. The songs on “Feel The Void” are classic Hot Water Music, and hearkens back to some of their best and most beloved output from the mid-90s, and is definitely their best offering since the highly adored and incredibly catchy Caution LP from the early 2000s. If you like your punk rock and roll all things heavy, melodic, anthemic, heart-felt and chock full of hooks done right, be sure to pick up the latest from Hot Water Music. Even with all of the younger and more popular up and coming bands who've been heavily influenced by HWM, these Gainsville OGs are still and will always be the reigning champs when it comes to this style of punk rock. Trust me, give "Feel the Void" a spin, and you'll understand why.

Jason Gordon on Tuesday, March 22, 2022