There's a rawness to 'Come Clean' that feels intentional, almost confrontational. After 25 years of defining themselves through one sound, Belgian rock duo Triggerfinger have released something that refuses to play it safe. This isn't nostalgia. It's a band choosing evolution over comfort, and the result is quietly electrifying.
From the opening bars, the track signals a departure. Gone are the expansive, overdriven tones that made them one of Europe's most explosive live acts. In their place: something tighter, sharper, more rhythmically urgent. Ruben Block's vocals carry the same lived-in grit, but they're framed differently now, nestled within soaring chorus melodies that push toward accessibility without sacrificing edge.
Produced once again by Mitchell Froom, 'Come Clean' balances restraint and release with impressive control. The production doesn't announce itself; it serves the song, giving space for emotion to land without excess. These sessions yielded enough material for a full album due mid-late 2026, and if this single is any indication, Triggerfinger are approaching that project with real intention.
Lyrically, Block explores the weight of confession, the push and pull between honesty and self-preservation. "The song sings about wrestling with the disconnect of a pressing urge to come clean and at the same time the barrier brought by the chance of receiving a negative reply," he explains. There's a tension here that feels particularly resonant—the desire to be seen fully, weighed against the risk of rejection.
The context adds another layer. Last autumn, just days after releasing their first new material since 2017, the band lost bassist Monsieur Paul, who had stepped away in 2023 but remained close to Block and Mario Goossens. That loss hovers over this new chapter, shaping the urgency with which the duo have returned. Their recent 25-date European tour, which saw most shows sell out, proved the appetite is still there.
'Come Clean' doesn't chase trends or attempt to recapture past glories. Instead, it stands as evidence of a band willing to risk reinvention, to trust their instincts even when the path forward isn't clear. Here, Triggerfinger have crafted something that honors their past while refusing to be defined by it.
Stream the single in the player below





