Restrictions have been circling the same cold star since 2010, two brothers huddled in Minsk’s slab-sided sprawl, teaching their guitars to argue with each other like siblings who share a bedroom and a record collection. You can hear the years in that tension. Back when they were still hauling amps into Graffiti Club and baptizing themselves in cheap fog, the twin-guitar attack felt like rebar shoved through silk. By the time they hit Deathcave Festival in 2011, then the biggest old-school goth congregation in Eastern Europe, these brooding, Brutalist Belarusians were already sharpening their angles against drum machines, trading human swing for metallic insistence.
That history hums inside Our Own Lhasa, even as the project has retreated into the studio and swapped stage heat for careful construction. After 2015, the live chapter closed, and the brothers turned toward their day jobs, letting the band mutate into something more controlled, more deliberate. The friction of those early sets has been sanded into sleek lines of synth and drum programming, yet the pulse of post-punk still rattles the ribs.
The guitars arrive first, jangling with that familiar 1980s ache, nodding toward The Sisters of Mercy, Joy Division and The Cure without turning into cosplay. A thin, high line traces the melody while a lower figure keeps tugging at the hem of the song. The synths hover in wide arcs, lending the track a sense of altitude that contrasts with the emotional weight at its centre. There’s space in the track, but it isn’t empty; it feels like the echo in a room where someone has just moved out and left the outline of their furniture in dust.
The band says, “Our Own Lhasa symbolizes a shared dream we once had — one that is now out of reach.” That’s the thesis and the wound. The lyrics circle emotional disconnection and the slow recognition that some visions calcify into relics. You can hear the awakening in the vocal delivery, a steady climb toward acceptance that never tips into melodrama. The drum machine ticks forward with patient resolve, giving the song a spine that keeps it upright even when the chords sag with loss.
Restrictions have aged into their influences without being swallowed by them. Our Own Lhasa stands as a clear-eyed dispatch from two musicians who’ve traded youthful abrasion for focus, who understand that sometimes the most brutal realization is simply admitting the mountain you meant to climb has receded into myth.
Listen to Our Own Lhasa below and order the single here.
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