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Classic Bands

The Cure Announce the Release of “Alone,” Their First New Single in 16 Years

The Cure, one of the most influential forces in alternative music, have finally announced the release of their first new song in 16 years. “Alone,” the first taste of the long-awaited Songs of a Lost World album, is set to premiere this Thursday, September 26th, on Mary Anne Hobbs’s BBC Radio 6 Music show.

The band’s announcement comes in the wake of one of the best new album campaigns in recent history, brimming with cryptic hints and an air of mystery. A snippet of “Alone” was shared last Friday via the Songs of a Lost World website and The Cure’s WhatsApp channel. Those 30 seconds were enough to send ripples through the band’s fanbase. A slow, brooding ballad with mournful keys, “Alone” unfurls with heavy drums and The Cure’s trademark guitar tones, a haunting undercurrent over which Robert Smith’s unmistakable voice powerfully trembles: “This is the end of every song that we sing / the fire burned out to ash, the stars grow dim with tears.” It’s a bleak sentiment, but one that rings true for the band who have always, at times playfully, lived in the shadows of existential despair, even as they’ve become elder statesmen of a music scene they helped create.

The anticipation surrounding “Alone”—and indeed the album itself—has been building since The Cure’s 2022-2023 tour, where they performed the song live to sold-out audiences eager for the new material. The song served as the opener for those shows, casting a melancholic spell from the start, its crawling tempo and symphonic weight only heightening the air of anticipation. That Smith chose to lead with “Alone” during those performances feels significant; it’s an invitation back into The Cure’s world, where loss, longing, and memory intertwine in endless, mournful loops.

If “Alone” is any indication of the more prominent themes on Songs of a Lost World, we may be in for one of The Cure’s darkest offerings yet. The lyrics speak of finality—the end of a journey, the dimming of stars, the inevitable burnout of all things. It’s a fitting sentiment for a band that, for decades, has wandered through the emotional wastelands of human existence, chronicling everything from youthful anguish to the slow crawl of mortality and the absurdity of existence to the just plain absurd. But if this is an ending, it feels like one only The Cure could deliver—a closing chapter that doesn’t necessarily promise peace, but rather, the quiet acceptance that nothing lasts forever, and even the stars will fade long after we are gone.

Stay tuned—there’s more to come, and as ever with The Cure, the end is never really the end.

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From the Editor at Post-Punk.com

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