From their unassuming origins as a group of school friends drawn together by a shared passion for music to the global touring force they have quietly become, The Twilight Sad’s ascent has been forged the old way with grit, graft, and five exceptional studio albums. The Kilsyth group – based around the core duo of James Graham and Andy MacFarlane – seemed to emerge fully formed with their blindsiding debut Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters (2007) — a masterpiece of swirling guitars, thunderous drums, and James Graham’s unmistakable, heartfelt vocals delivered in his thick Scottish brogue. Their sound evolved beautifully on Forget the Night Ahead (2009) and No One Can Ever Know (2012), where dark synth textures and post-punk influences deepened the band’s brooding power. With Nobody Wants to Be Here and Nobody Wants to Leave (2014), the band achieved a perfect balance between noise and melody, heartbreak and catharsis. Their last album, It Won/t Be Like This All the Time (2019), channelled both urgency and tenderness, pushing their emotional intensity to new heights. The Twilight Sad stand apart for their fearless honesty, sonic ambition, and the emotional connection they forge with listeners — a rare band that transforms despair into beauty, noise into grace, and vulnerability into something transcendent.