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A Beautiful Mess: A Review of Mend by PSYCHOSIS


If the human mind could somehow manifest in music, PSYCHOSIS’ “Mend” would be the broken mirror pieces scattered on the ground. There’s no glitzy surface, no reassuring solution, and definitely no neat bow tying it all up in a bow. This is not a song for the squeamish- it’s for those existing in the ruins, scrounging towards the faint light of something more.

Shattered Introduction
Mend” does not gently guide you in. But instead, it drops you headfirst into its frenetic energy with big, charred guitars that sound less like guitars at all and more like naked weapons of emotional release. The song starts out slowly and grindingly, like it’s dragging itself out of the ruins of some industrial hellhole. Luka Mrduljas and Rando Stipisic, PSYCHOSIS’s brain and muscle, are well aware of what they do- they construct a soundscape as heavy as lead that almost leaves burn marks.

The vocals, performed with a clear sense of urgency, are visceral and raw. Rando’s singing is not about perfection- it’s jagged and rough-around-the-edges, but cutting like a knife. Every word sounds like it’s being dredged out of a well of pain and frustration, and the song takes on a cathartic energy that lands hard.

A Dive into Emotional Wreckage
What sets “Mend” apart is its bracing openness to sitting with awkwardness. This isn’t the victorious anthem of healing- it’s the anguished cry from a person who is still in the trenches. There’s a gritty realism in how the song copes with break and stress, embracing the barely-held-together nature of attempting to mend when the injuries are new.

Instead of offering resolution, “Mend” revels in the chaos. It’s the sonic equivalent of gritting your teeth while holding onto the shards of your life, knowing full well they might cut you. And that’s kind of the point- it’s not about the destination; it’s about the messy, agonising journey of trying to move forward.

Uncompromising Sound
PSYCHOSIS have found their niche in the Croatian underground, where they can stay true to themselves without conforming to trends. Their sound takes from grunge, metal, and industrial noise, but it never sounds like it’s limited to only one genre. Rather, it exists in a place that’s all their own- dark, intimate, and unflinchingly raw.

The industrial overtones lend “Mend” a mechanized bite, crunching and creaking like a malfunctioning machine on the brink of breakdown. It’s dense and relentless, but somehow never overproduced. The song preserves an organic texture, as though recorded in a single take, with all its flaws intact to enrich the grand emotional arc.

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A Relatable Catharsis
The charm of “Mend” is in its universality. It’s not attempting to sound radio-friendly or number one- it’s attempting to be meaningful. And to those who’ve ended up in the same emotional place, the song speaks volumes. It’s the kind of song you yell out at 2 a.m. with your car windows rolled up, the one you have on repeat when words cannot convey what you’re dealing with.

This rawness, this unadulterated emotion, is what makes this song so alive. It’s music that greets you where you are, in the midst of your chaos.

Breaking the Mould
PSYCHOSIS don’t care about playing by the book. They’re not bound by trends or breaking neatly into categories. Rather, they’re making music that is vital and essential, weaving in influences without being tied down to them. There’s an agitated momentum in their sound, a refusal to remain static or be constrained.

Mend” is testament to that ideology. It’s a battle-hardened howl from the Croatian underground, a brutally honest assertion of what it is to be human. It’s unclean, it’s unfinished, and that’s exactly why it succeeds.

Final Thoughts
PSYCHOSIS’ “Mend” isn’t for everyone, and that’s fine. It’s not meant to be. It’s for the broken, battered, and ones who still haven’t learned how to put themselves back together yet. It’s messy, cracked, and painfully real.

This song isn’t about fixing- it’s about the breakdown that precedes it. It’s the score to the fractures of life and the painful, torturous act of trying to keep it all together. In an era that tends to sugarcoat agony, “Mend” is a brutally honest account of what it’s like to be human.

So, if you’re looking for something polished and easy to digest, look elsewhere. But if you’re ready to face the mess head-on, “Mend” is here for you. Just don’t expect it to hold your hand.

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