LONESOME release music video for new single ‘We Are Sleepless’

LONESOME release music video for new single ‘We Are Sleepless’

Debut album, ‘In the Hope This Finds You’, out now via Easy Life Records

Album release show announced for October 18th

Photo Credit: Jay Bass

Cambridge emo quintet Lonesome have today released their debut full-length album In the Hope This Finds You, via their new label home Easy Life Records (Softcult, Normandie, Lonely The Brave).

To coincide with the release, the band have shared the official music video for their new single, ‘We Are Sleepless’Delicate yet unflinching, ‘We Are Sleepless’ encapsulates the emotional depth at the heart of In the Hope This Finds You. Together, the single and album mark the arrival of Lonesome as one of the UK’s most compelling new voices in the emo and post-rock space.

Speaking on the new single, Lonesome share, “We Are Sleepless captures the liminal state of emotional insomnia, a restless mind wandering through regrets, memories, and flickers of resilience. It is the sound of being disconnected, internally adrift, yet still faintly alive beneath it all. The refrain “We are sleepless” becomes a mantra of shared disquiet. Two people, perhaps once close, now float in separate silences, and yet there’s a strange comfort in that mutual drifting, as if pain is more bearable when not borne alone. ‘I see you, but I’m alive’ carries the song toward a quiet, defiant survival; a heartbeat in the dark that refuses to give in. Released alongside In the Hope This Finds You, We Are Sleepless is both fragile and resilient: a portrait of what it means to endure when sleep, peace, and certainty feel just out of reach.”

LONESOME – ‘We Are Sleepless’ (Official Music Video)

From a structural perspective, In the Hope This Finds You is a masterclass in cohesion. Each of the ten tracks connects fluidly into the next, continuing Lonesome’s signature approach to continuity and flow. When the trilogy is played in the order of release – EP, single, then full album – it becomes one unbroken musical and emotional arc. However, the band offers alternate configurations, like splitting In the Hope This Finds You into halves and inserting the debut EP in between, achieving a similarly uninterrupted experience. Even more compelling is the album’s ability to loop infinitely: both the first and last tracks begin with the same ambient drone, allowing the cycle to repeat endlessly – both musically and thematically mirroring the emotional loops explored in the lyrics.

The track-listing itself reads as a sentence, turning the album into a kind of poetic statement:

“Liar, save your words – can you hear me when I speak to you? You say it’s love; we are sleepless. Am I failing myself, for we are strangers again? You are nothing, just like you wrote to me.”

This single, haunting sentence encapsulates the album’s tone: intimate, accusatory, longing, and reflective.

Visually and conceptually, the album centres around two characters: the anonymous figure and the main protagonist. The anonymous figure, with their identity concealed beneath a red sheet, represents the personification of deceit – an embodiment of misdirection and the lies we tell ourselves or others.

In contrast, the main protagonist is depicted through the use of two symbolic symbols: a blindfold and a crown. The blindfold signifies a state of unawareness – being blind to the truth or refusing to see what is directly in front of you – while the crown represents acceptance, evoking imagery of surrender and understanding, much like the biblical parallel of Jesus accepting his fate with the crown of thorns. These visual elements trace a journey from deception to self-realisation, underscoring the emotional progression woven throughout the album.

Lonesome’s intertextual songwriting strengthens this sense of connectedness. The track Liar, for example, references and subtly contradicts a line from To Myself, From Myself, not only lyrically but melodically. The echo of “Forget the life you had. There was nothing for you” plays against “Remember who you are. Whom your mother made you,” suggesting a shift from a place of grounding to one of detachment. Similarly, Like You Wrote to Me functions as both a lyrical and thematic callback to the band’s origin, referencing the EP’s format – a letter to one’s past self – thus closing the loop that began at the very start.

Ultimately, In the Hope This Finds You is less an album and more a final chapter in a self-contained sonic novel. It is built on layered continuity, narrative recursion, and emotional honesty. By embedding callbacks, alternate listening paths, and symbolic characters, Lonesome invites listeners not just to hear the music, but to live inside it – and perhaps, to find themselves reflected in its echo.

In the Hope This Finds You dares to ask: Can love survive the truth? Each song doesn’t just search for an answer – it lives inside the question.

‘In the Hope This Finds You’

Tracklisting:

1) Liar

2) Save Your Words

3) Can You Hear Me

4) When I Speak To You

5) You Say It’s Love

6) We Are Sleepless

7) Am I Failing Myself?

8) For We Are Strangers Again

9) You’re Nothing

10) Just Like You Wrote To Me

Pre-order/Pre-save:

Lonesome – ‘In the Hope This Finds You’

Lonesome will celebrate the release of their forthcoming album with two special shows this October. One of the shows will see the band return to Peterborough for a unique headline performance, where fans will get the chance to hear ‘In the Hope This Finds You’ performed live in full for the very first time.

OCTOBER

9 London The Underworld w/ Grumble Bee

18 Peterborough The Met Lounge