The Brave Announce 2020 Tour ft. Sleep Talk and More
We don’t get to choose the people we fall in love with or the places that mean a lot to us;
these things just make sense on a deeper level, they connect each one of us in myriad
mysterious ways. And for The Brave, it’s these connections that they wanted to celebrate
on second album ‘Aura’.
“We all believe in auras,” explains vocalist Nathan Toussaint, “whether it be the auras that
surround the people we meet during our travels, or the ones surrounding the places we
visit either on tour or in our personal lives. It's these same auras that draw us back to these
places we visit or allow us to develop relationships with new people we meet and connect
with along the way. The same applies to the music we write and the aura that it carries
with it.”
Formed in Brisbane in 2013, The Brave quickly started turning heads with 2014 EP ‘Endless’
captured their particular brand of lightning in a bottle with the critically acclaimed
breakout debut album ‘Epoch’ in 2016, which won plaudits worldwide from the likes of
BBC Radio 1, Kerrang, Triple J and more. ‘Aura’ takes that groundwork and builds on it in
striking fashion.
The anthemic ‘Technicolor’ leads the charge and establishes them as inventive, emotive
and dynamic keepers of the flame, taking the energy and chaos of a youthful mistake and
recasts it as something quite different. “It’s about one of my first experiences of getting a
little too loose when I was young,” remembers Toussaint. “That feeling of everything
around you not being what it seems and wanting to get back to normality. It was
an experience that is funny now to think back on, but at the time I remember thinking I
was never going to be the same again.”
‘Aura’ is an expansive album that deals with some weighty questions, and that sense of
searching for something bigger is rendered in The Brave’s uniquely punchy-yet-cinematic
style. ‘Burn’, for example, has its roots in personal tragedy and pain but Toussaint wanted
to take that unique feeling and turn it into something universal.
“This is a song that deals with loss, whether that’s the loss of a relationship, or the death
of a person,” he says. “For us, it touches on dealing with the situation of a person close to
us who was going through some incredibly tough times with a family member. As the song
came together we tried not to be too obvious in what the lyrics were about, and opted for
a more overarching theme of loss and learning to let go.”
All told, ‘Aura’ is a bold snapshot of a band seeking to use the simple power of music to
move people. Threaded throughout are themes of change, love and loss, and taken as a
whole body of work it’s sure to further establish The Brave as one of the most forwardthinking
and exciting bands in heavy music in 2019.