Manchester’s genre-defying four-piece Witch Fever return today with their most visceral statement yet: 'FEVEREATEN', the punishing title track from their forthcoming second album, due on the 31st October via Music For Nations / Sony.
A blistering fusion of doom-laden riffs, industrial noise, and haunting gothic atmospheres, 'FEVEREATEN' expands on the band’s already volatile sound. As with much of Witch Fever’s work, it’s lyrically unflinching, a confrontation with religious trauma, mental anguish, and self-perception.
“I wrote ‘FEVEREATEN’ when I realised I couldn’t stop myself writing about the church,” explains vocalist and lyricist Amy Walpole. “It’s about feeling drained by that fixation and being consumed by intrusive thoughts. I’m angry that I struggle more than others and feel like a burden – but I’m also determined to hold onto that anger and use it productively.”
Following earlier singles 'THE GARDEN', a distorted anti-patriarchal roar, and 'DEAD TO ME!', which twisted raw punk into something more experimental, 'FEVEREATEN' shows the band at their heaviest and most cathartic.
Watch the new video in the player below.







