The Twilight Sad - No-One Can Ever Know
by Stephen Moore
Monday, February 6, 2012
1:32 PM
The sombre but striking Scots’ third release sees them switch tack to synths - and make arguably the best record of their career.

The third record from this under-the-radar Scottish outfit is a marked departure from the intense, wall-of-sound guitars of its predecessors.
While James Graham retains his darkly mysterious poetry, ominous timbre and fiercely-rolled ‘R’s, No-One Can Ever Know sounds like Bladerunner burning through endless Scottish sink estates on an ashen motorbike.
Its nine tracks head down an electronic, synth-fuelled motorik road, surveying intensely bleak, sometimes monumental soundscapes.
It might sound a bit much, but bear with it - where Editors played at being gaunt-faced, ‘80s-apeing miserablists, The Twilight Sad feel like the real deal but add a serrated, contemporary edge.
It’s taut, sparse, ominous and ocassionally threatening - in the best and most evocative sense. These fierce symphonies from the doldrums are not for the faint-hearted.
4 stars
Rapper Professor Green has said he was only joking when he posted Twitter comments suggesting he was unhappy with his Made In Chelsea girlfriend Millie Mackintosh stripping down to her underwear for an advertising campaign.
0 comments