7/10
There’s a moment on 'Shadowland' where Erro stop sounding like a band you’ve discovered and start feeling like one you’ve always known. It’s that rare second chapter that sharpens instinct, confidence, and emotional reach as it plays.
Led by Nikki Stagel’s magnetic presence, 'Shadowland' stretches Erro’s world outward while pulling us closer in. The songs feel lived-in and immediate, as though they’re being delivered directly from the room they were born in. There’s an unmistakable sense of trust in the material, the performances, and the idea that the first take can hold more truth than endless refinement ever could.
Musically, the album moves with an easy fluidity, weaving together melodic immediacy and atmospheric depth. Guitars shimmer and bite in equal measure, rhythms breathe rather than march, and vocals land with a clarity that feels human instead of polished smooth. Stagel’s songwriting remains the gravitational centre, balancing vulnerability and resolve with the confidence of someone no longer second-guessing their voice.
What makes 'Shadowland' especially striking is its emotional pacing. Hooks linger without demanding attention, choruses settle into your memory like half-remembered dreams, and quieter passages carry just as much weight as the louder ones. It’s music that understands tension is sometimes about restraint.
By the time 'Shadowland' reaches its final stretch, Erro sound fully at ease in their own skin. Warm, immersive, and quietly powerful, 'Shadowland' confirms Erro as a group who know exactly who they are and aren’t afraid to let you hear it, unfiltered.