
Adorn arrive swinging with Let Love Remain, their April 10, 2026 debut, and honestly, it feels like a statement carved in stone. Hailing from Dallas, the band pulls together years of experience into a record that wrestles with division, identity, and connection. These big themes, sure, but they handle them with grit. Thereโs a raw, lived-in quality to the album, too, thanks to their fully independent recording process, where even the โhappy accidentsโ are left intact. It gives the whole thing a messy, human, and real pulse.
Things kick off with โLet Love Remain,โ a brief but haunting opener. Gentle piano notes drift in like fog before Austin Gordonโs husky voice settles over them, heavy with quiet emotion. Itโs short, yeah, but it lingers, like a thought you canโt quite shake. Then boom, โThe Brave and Bled Defiantโ flips the switch. Guitars churn and bite, drums crash forward, and Gordon pushes his voice to the edge. Itโs strained, urgent, almost unraveling.
โPass the Pulseโ slides in with a message that hits close to home, tackling cultural division with both frustration and hope. Itโs catchy, but thereโs weight behind every line, making it more than just another alt-rock anthem. Meanwhile, โThe End Is Not Yetโ takes a darker turn, layering warm guitars under an eerie archival voice praising destruction. Itโs ironic, unsettling, and downright chilling.
By the time โA House Divided Cannot Standโ rolls around, the album is in full throttle. Driving riffs and pounding drums carry a sense of urgency, as if the band is racing against time itself. All in all, Let Love Remain earns it, one raw, resonant moment at a time.
STAY IN TOUCH:
FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | SPOTIFY | TIKTOK | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

Review by: Naomi Joan
