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Every Hell Turn Up the Pressure on Let Me Go

“We slowly tore it apart over a few weeks to make it more gnarly and dissonant, more aligned with Every Hell vibe.”

Every Hell come back louder, leaner and more dangerous

Brighton and Bristol’s Every Hell have kicked the door back open with “Let Me Go”, a single that feels built to leave dents. The band, now operating as an expanded five-piece, sound bigger and more volatile than ever, pushing further into a world of crushing riffs, jagged grooves and a kind of forward momentum that barely lets up for breath.

EVERY HELL – CREDIT – @LBPhoto.uk

Already one of the more compelling heavy voices working in the UK underground, Every Hell have spent the past year sharpening their identity. On “Let Me Go”, that growth lands hard. It is not simply aggressive for the sake of it; the track is tightly wound, tense and alive, balancing dissonance with movement in a way that makes it feel constantly on the verge of spilling over.

The new single arrives alongside a fresh video and another clear sign that the band are widening their scope. With added guitar, synths and a more expansive production approach, Every Hell are no longer just hitting hard, they are building something with real scale.

A song pulled apart and rebuilt

Vocalist and saxophonist Will Gardner says the track began life in summer 2025 as an idea that needed reshaping before it truly felt like Every Hell.

According to Gardner, the band took an early version that felt “a bit too proggy” and gradually dismantled it in the rehearsal room, rebuilding it into something more abrasive, dissonant and true to their instincts. That process seems to sit at the centre of why “Let Me Go” feels so focused. It sounds like a song that has been tested, stripped down and deliberately made uglier in all the right ways.

Lyrically, it deals with cycles of guilt, depression and anxiety, and the temptation to surrender to those darker states rather than keep fighting against them. There is a rawness to that framing which suits the music perfectly. The band are clearly interested in heaviness as something more than volume alone.

A band with serious pedigree

At the heart of Every Hell is a lineup with deep roots across heavy music and beyond. Gardner’s work with Black Peaks remains a notable part of the band’s orbit, while guitarist Toby Stewart brings years of appearances at festivals including ArcTanGent, 2000trees and Bloodstock. New member Jules Maas-Palmer expands the group’s sound further on guitar and synths, bringing experience that stretches across performance, production and underground sound-system culture.

Bassist Andrew Gosden, also formerly of Black Peaks, adds another layer of experience, while drummer Mark Roberts anchors the band with a background that includes production, engineering and mixing credits for Black Peaks, Jamie Lenman, Delta Sleep, Alpha Male Tea Party and The Physics House Band.

That breadth of experience helps explain why Every Hell feel so locked in already. Even when the songs sound chaotic, there is a strong sense of purpose underneath them.

Building on Vertebrate

The band’s 2024 “Vertebrate” EP introduced a raw and immediate approach, recorded straight to tape and captured live in the room. Since then, Every Hell have continued to build their reputation through a string of bright, infectious singles and live dates alongside the likes of Knives, Vower, Sick Joy, The St Pierre Snake Invasion and Peach.

They have also made appearances at 2000trees Festival, ArcTanGent, Noizzefest, Castle Fest and Misery Loves Company, steadily carving out a place for themselves in the heavier end of the UK circuit. “Let Me Go” feels like the sound of that groundwork paying off.

Every Hell tour 2026

Live dates

Every Hell have several UK shows lined up, with more headline dates, festival slots and support shows expected to follow.

  • 21 March – Brighton – The Pipeline – with As Living Arrows + Could Be Ghosts
  • 9 May – Nottingham – Rescue Rooms – with Haggard Cat
  • 10 May – Birmingham – The Rainbow – with Alpha Male Tea Party
  • 28 May – London – The Black Heart – with Haggard Cat
  • 29 May – Southampton – The Joiners – with Haggard Cat
  • 30 May – Bristol – The Louisiana – with Haggard Cat
  • 26 June – Nottingham – JT Soar – with Death Cult Electric

The band are also set to perform at The Great Escape in May, adding another strong marker to what is shaping up to be a busy year.

Listen to ‘Let Me Go’ – HERE

Every Hell lineup

  • Will Gardner – Vocals & Saxophone
  • Toby Stewert – Guitar & Vocals
  • Andrew Gosden – Bass & Vocals
  • Mark Roberts – Drums & Production
  • Jules Maas-Palmer – Guitar & Synths
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