Riff-Fueled Ascent
Honeymoon Disease step into the spotlight with the official video for Higher, a hard-driving cut that channels the classic tradition of twin-guitar rock while pushing their own high-voltage identity. The Gothenburg quartet hit with intent, trimming away excess to leave guitars, bass, drums and a commanding vocal front and center. It is a lean, hook-forward statement from a band that thrives on momentum, melody and sweat.
The Song’s Pulse and Shape
Higher rides a brisk tempo and a riff that lodges immediately, built for the open road and the club stage. The arrangement leans on stacked guitars that trade between tight rhythm work and harmonized phrases, with a chorus that lifts on a bright, melodic turn. The track does not overcomplicate its mission. It burns hot, pivots into a concise lead break, and returns to the hook with even more bite, true to the economy and urgency that define so much of seventies-bred hard rock.
Guitars That Spark and Snarl
The band’s signature is the conversation between two guitars, a dialog that nods to the tradition of Thin Lizzy while planting both feet in the present. Overdriven tones carry a satisfying midrange crunch. Chords hit in unison before the lines peel apart into tightly wrapped harmonies. Flickers of blues phrasing and quick, pentatonic flashes keep the soloing grounded in songcraft rather than excess. It is a sound built for grit and lift, designed to make the chorus feel like it catches air.
Voice, Lyrics and Attitude
Vocally, Higher is a study in propulsion. The lead line cuts through the pocket with bite and clarity, riding close to the top of the mix. Lyrically, the song works in the realm of elevation and escape, leaning into images of forward motion and personal charge. The words aim for movement rather than introspective sprawl, matching the arrangement’s thirst for speed. It is rock as ignition, less confession than challenge, and it suits the band’s high-energy posture.
Engine Room Precision
Underneath, the rhythm section keeps the frame tight. Drums sit crisp and dry, with snare and hi-hat directing traffic while the kick drum anchors the surge. The bass tone is solid and slightly overdriven, gluing the guitars to the drums and pushing the groove from below. Together they leave enough space for the twin-guitar interplay to breathe, yet they never loosen their grip on the song’s forward lean. The result is a chassis built for speed that still corners with confidence.
Visual Language of the Video
The official clip leans into performance. The camera stays close to the players, emphasizing hands on frets, sticks on skins and the kinetic relay that happens when a band rides a riff in lockstep. Lighting favors warmth, with a lived-in palette that complements the group’s analog-leaning sound. Quick edits accent chord hits and drum fills, underscoring the song’s sense of acceleration. It is an unfussy visual, one that trusts the charisma of a tight unit rather than propping the track up with heavy narrative.
From Breakout Sparks to Full-Blooded Fire
Honeymoon Disease first turned heads with Fast Love in 2014, a single that showed how convincingly they could bottle classic hard rock energy without resorting to pastiche. The B-side, a crackling take on The Damned’s Neat, Neat, Neat, underlined their instinct for economy and punch. With their debut album The Transcendence, the quartet broadened that promise into a set of songs that balance swagger, melody and muscle. Tracks like Gotta Move! make the case for the band’s anthemic streak, and Higher sits comfortably among these, offering a bright, urgent slice of their aesthetic.
Context in a Revitalized Tradition
Sweden’s guitar-rock resurgence has birthed a clutch of bands invested in groove, dynamics and song-first arrangements. Honeymoon Disease belong in that conversation, not as archivists but as players who understand what makes the form tick. The classic references are there for anyone listening closely enough, from the harmonized leads associated with Thin Lizzy to the tight, highway-ready stride that recalls Rainbow at their most streamlined. Yet the music’s spark is their own, sharpened by the interplay between Jenna and Acid on guitars and a rhythm section that prizes feel and economy.
Production Touches and Sonic Choices
The sound of Higher favors immediacy. Guitars are panned for width, drums are kept present and unfussy, and vocals sit up front without excessive gloss. The mix leaves transients intact, letting the edges of picks and sticks register. These choices align with a broader commitment to performance-forward rock. It is the difference between a facsimile of the past and a living, breathing band that trusts chemistry more than studio tricks.
Why It Sticks
Higher distills the reasons Honeymoon Disease continue to resonate. The song is condensed adrenaline, short on pretense and long on craft, with a chorus designed to be remembered and a guitar language that favors harmony and heat over flash. The video captures the unit in motion, focused and direct. In a landscape where retro can mean risk-free imitation, Honeymoon Disease choose vitality. They chase the feeling that made this music compelling in the first place, then carry it higher.
HONEYMOON DISEASE – Higher (Official Video) Related Posts
- Hair of the Dog (2010 – Remaster)The remastered version of "Hair of the Dog" by Nazareth …
- Queens Of The Stone Age – First It Giveth (Official Music Video)Queens of the Stone Age has released a remastered music …
- Green Eyes – Dreaming of You | A beautiful ballad about love that exists only in dreams"Dreaming of You" is a poignant ballad that explores the …
- SCARDUST feat. PATTY GURDY – “CONCRETE CAGES” (Official Music Video)SCARDUST has released the official music video for "Concrete Cages," …
- The Heimatdamisch: Sweet Child o’ Mine (Guns n’ Roses)The Heimatdamisch presents their rendition of "Sweet Child o' Mine," …
- In This Moment – “The In-Between” [OFFICIAL VIDEO]In This Moment has released the official video for "The …