

Cartoon Darkness
In the eight years since Amyl and The Sniffers came together in Melbourneās sticky pub-rock scene, Amyl and the Sniffers have become masters of balancing power and playfulness. With two critically acclaimed albums under their belt - 2019ās self-titled debut and 2021ās visceral āComfort To Meā - vocalist Amy Taylor, guitarist Declan Mehrtens, bassist Gus Romer and drummer Bryce Wilson have achieved something unique and remarkable.
Since the release of Comfort to Me, the band has seen their horizons broaden exponentially in every way. And itās this attitude - bigger, brighter, smarter, sharper - thatās fuelling their third album, āCartoon Darknessā. Recorded with producer Nick Launay at Foo Fightersā 606 Studios in Los Angeles, on the same desk that captured Nirvanaās Nevermind and Fleetwood Macās Rumours, the latest Amyl offering is full of surprises. Musically, Mehrtens, Romer and Wilson have written The Sniffersā most diverse album yet. It stretches from classic punk to the glammy strut of recent single āU Should Not Be Doing Thatā to the stormy balladry of āBig Dreamsā (which is a sonic gear shift worthy of the title).Ā
Cartoon Darkness is about climate crisis, war, AI, tip-toeing on the eggshells of politics, and people feeling like they're helping by having a voice online when weāre all just feeding the data beast of Big Tech, our modern day god. Itās about the fact that our generation is spoon-fed information. We look like adults, but weāre children forever cocooned in a shell. Weāre all passively gulping up distractions that donāt even cause pleasure, sensation or joy, they just cause numbness.Ā
Everything is such hard work, everything is heartbreaking, but everything is beautiful. I want to celebrate. I want to put my phone down and see someone's facial expression change with what they say. I want to people-watch. I want to see if there are bugs where I walk, but I don't see them. I also want the fantasy and the escapism. I want to lean into hedonism, I want to feel alive, while acknowledging the dystopia and chaos unfolding around me.
Cartoon Darkness is driving head first into the unknown, into this looming sketch of the future that feels terrible, but doesnāt even exist yet. A childlike darkness. I donāt want to meet the devil half-way and mourn what we have right now. The future is cartoon, the prescription is dark, but it's novelty. It's just a joke. It's fun.
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In the eight years since Amyl and The Sniffers came together in Melbourneās sticky pub-rock scene, Amyl and the Sniffers have become masters of balancing power and playfulness. With two critically acclaimed albums under their belt - 2019ās self-titled debut and 2021ās visceral āComfort To Meā - vocalist Amy Taylor, guitarist Declan Mehrtens, bassist Gus Romer and drummer Bryce Wilson have achieved something unique and remarkable.
Since the release of Comfort to Me, the band has seen their horizons broaden exponentially in every way. And itās this attitude - bigger, brighter, smarter, sharper - thatās fuelling their third album, āCartoon Darknessā. Recorded with producer Nick Launay at Foo Fightersā 606 Studios in Los Angeles, on the same desk that captured Nirvanaās Nevermind and Fleetwood Macās Rumours, the latest Amyl offering is full of surprises. Musically, Mehrtens, Romer and Wilson have written The Sniffersā most diverse album yet. It stretches from classic punk to the glammy strut of recent single āU Should Not Be Doing Thatā to the stormy balladry of āBig Dreamsā (which is a sonic gear shift worthy of the title).Ā
Cartoon Darkness is about climate crisis, war, AI, tip-toeing on the eggshells of politics, and people feeling like they're helping by having a voice online when weāre all just feeding the data beast of Big Tech, our modern day god. Itās about the fact that our generation is spoon-fed information. We look like adults, but weāre children forever cocooned in a shell. Weāre all passively gulping up distractions that donāt even cause pleasure, sensation or joy, they just cause numbness.Ā
Everything is such hard work, everything is heartbreaking, but everything is beautiful. I want to celebrate. I want to put my phone down and see someone's facial expression change with what they say. I want to people-watch. I want to see if there are bugs where I walk, but I don't see them. I also want the fantasy and the escapism. I want to lean into hedonism, I want to feel alive, while acknowledging the dystopia and chaos unfolding around me.
Cartoon Darkness is driving head first into the unknown, into this looming sketch of the future that feels terrible, but doesnāt even exist yet. A childlike darkness. I donāt want to meet the devil half-way and mourn what we have right now. The future is cartoon, the prescription is dark, but it's novelty. It's just a joke. It's fun.

















