Cracked lips telling lies with final breath
blood moon shining on the edge of death.
There was a particular thrill to the old-school deathrock scene, a sense that it had taken hardcore punk’s aggression and nihilism and answered back with gallows humour, graveyard glamour, and a crooked smile full of bad intentions. It lived in coffin-club corners, in photocopied flyers, in teased hair and graveyard glamour, in records that sounded like they had clawed their way out of the dirt with lipstick still intact.
When the international deathrock revival took hold in the 2000s, Europe embraced it with especially feverish devotion. Across Germany, Poland, Spain, France, and beyond, the sound found fertile ground again: skeletal post-punk basslines, horror-film camp, punk ferocity, and a taste for the theatrical that felt less nostalgic than necromantic. Warsaw’s Miguel and the Living Dead were one of the most entertaining bands to rise out of that wave, and their return with “Speaking in Smoke” feels like the kind of resurrection worth throwing open the crypt for.
Formed in Warsaw in 2001, Miguel and the Living Dead always understood that image and sound should move as one shuddering body. Their world was built from classic horror cinema, B-movie sleaze, and the raw visual snap of the 1980s underground, while their music fused European gothic, punk, and post-punk with American deathrock, then spiked the whole concoction with psychobilly, surf, garage rock’n’roll, country, and ska. Onstage, they brought dark theatrical flair with punk velocity; on record, they made songs that were aggressive, catchy, and gloriously unclean around the edges.
You can hear all of that unruly spirit rushing through “Speaking in Smoke.” Eerie Twilight Zone haunted-house sounds coil around heavy deathrock guitars, while strange chirps and horror-rock tension keep the room twitching. The bass lands thick as a thudding heartbeat. The drums move with the speed of rising panic. Slavik’s vocals boom from the depths, then meet sharp, higher-pitched replies in a call-and-response that makes the song feel half séance, zombie street brawl. It is deathrock at its finest: raw, catchy, macabre, and wired with that 60s horror kitsch sensibility that turns every corridor into a trap and every grin into a threat.
Lyrically, the track wallows in decay and delirium, summoning images of corruption, contamination, cracked flesh, and death closing in from every corner. It moves through a grotesque pageant of bodies coming apart, faith curdling into dread, and perception slipping into a fog where violence, desire, and panic blur together. The refrain lands like a fevered realization, as though the song has stumbled into a state of terrible lucidity. It is grotesque, playful, and electrified by menace, like being trapped inside a haunted house whose walls seem to inhale and exhale with the drumbeat and thick vocals.
The video amplifies that sensation with a barrage of black-and-white imagery that feels ripped from a damaged reel discovered in a basement below a condemned cinema. Hands stretch across the frame like inkblot apparitions. Lips loom in extreme close-up, blurred into something half-human, half-transmission. Concentric rings pulse like hypnotist targets. Faces flicker and disappear rapidly, with the band members flashing onscreen as quickly as Captain Howdy, their features distorted by static, split down the middle, or caught in shadow or harsh overexposure. Elsewhere, beams of light cut across the darkness like interrogation lamps, triangle sigils multiply into a fever dream, and a trembling waveform seems to turn sound itself into an occult disturbance. The whole thing feels like a séance gone wrong, broadcast through a broken television set at 3 a.m. What’s not to love?
Watch the video for “Speaking in Smoke” below.
Miguel and The Living Dead made their live debut in 2004 and quickly earned a reputation on the Polish and European underground circuit. Their debut album, Alarm!!!, arrived in 2005 via Austria’s Strobelight Records and drew strong underground press support, leading to extensive touring across Europe, including a warmly received appearance at Wave-Gotik-Treffen. Their follow-up, Postcards From The Other Side, further solidified their standing within the gothic and punk scene, with appearances at key events such as Castle Party Festival. After several years of hiatus, Miguel and the Living Dead returned in 2017 as an international act operating between Poland and the UK, resuming regular live activity and eventually crossing the Atlantic to headline Mexico’s Tenochtitlán Oscura festival.

Their recent material has been anticipated for years, and “Speaking in Smoke” arrives as another potent glimpse of what this new era can do. After the release of Hyenaz! in 2025, the band signed with Polish independent label Piranha Music, which will release the Hyenaz! EP, along with the full-length VII: This Is Not My Blood, later this year. The roots are still there, but the attack feels sharpened, the atmosphere deeper, the hooks more diseased and delicious.
“New material marks our return to the roots, but taken up a gear. After years of silence on the recording front, we wanted to sound deep and spacious, while still keeping our aggression as well as the catchy, twisted melodies and eclectic spirit that have always defined Miguel and the Living Dead. Signing with Piranha Music feels like the right moment to unleash this chapter properly.” — Pete Vincent, guitarist and band leader
Miguel and the Living Dead’s Hyenaz! EP is out now via Piranha Music. Order Here
Follow Miguel and the Living Dead:
Follow Piranha Music:


Or via: