Refresh

This website readdork.com/albums/divorce-drive-to-goldenhammer/ is currently offline. Cloudflare's Always Online™ shows a snapshot of this web page from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. To check for the live version, click Refresh.

DORK RADIO  |  NOW PLAYING:   Loading...

Divorce – Drive to Goldenhammer

4/5
Artists: Divorce

Label: Gravity / Capitol
Released: 7th March 2025

On their debut album, Divorce craft a richly textured journey through the backroads of British indie, where twangy guitars meet synthesizer swells and chamber pop arrangements bloom unexpectedly from alt-country seeds. ‘Drive to Goldenhammer’ is both carefully constructed and marvellously spontaneous; a trip planned with obsessive detail that still manages to find adventure at every turn.

The East Midlands quartet excel at building complex musical landscapes without losing their footing. ‘Antarctica’ arrives early, wearing its heart on its frost-bitten sleeve with harmonies that could’ve slipped off a Teenage Fanclub record. ‘Fever Pitch’ kicks down the door with a swagger that suggests these newcomers aren’t afraid to bare their teeth, while ‘Karen’ – “dedicated to Karen Carpenter”, they explain in their recent Dork cover feature – demonstrates their willingness to venture into cleverly oddball territory.

The album’s production, helmed by Catherine Marks, provides a perfect balance of polish and grit. Every layer, from the guitar work to the warm bed of synths that frequently cushion the vocals, enriches its surroundings. This is particularly evident on ‘All My Freaks’, which shifts from indie-rock standard-bearer into something far more dynamic.

The emotional range here is expansive throughout. ‘Old Broken String’ offers a necessary moment of reflection with its balladic pacing, while highlight ‘Where Do You Go’ showcases a more confrontational side of the band’s personality. ‘Jet Show’ keeps the album’s travel motif moving with its bouncy demeanour, though it’s the way these songs speak to each other across the record that really shows Divorce’s songwriting chops.

Like all the best road trips, this is an album that finds its magic in the spaces between destinations. Divorce have digested their record collections – from American alt-country to British indie-rock – and emerged with a map all their own. The journey to Goldenhammer proves consistently rewarding. 

4.0 rating
4/5
Total Score

Got opinions on this? Got fingers to type them with? Spare your group chat. Our Discord is ready.

Open the discussion thread

Discover the future of pop nonsense.

Say hello to Dork+, your AAA-backstage pass to the buzziest, most exciting music on the planet.

Get early access and exclusive features, sneak peeks behind the scenes, and the power to follow the artists you love as you curate your own personal music magazine. Plus, dive into our endless archive of back issues and never miss a beat.

Join DORK+ Join DORK+
Join DORK+