Let this be an object lesson to everyone in the music sphere - artists, labels, editorialists, promoters, fans, everyone. Gather ‘round, kids, it’s story time.
When Lost Society debuted in 2013 with Fast Loud Death, it was easy to see the band’s appeal - a throwback thrash band capable of putting out a lot of wattage, who understood the genre and its essential aspects. The album was enjoyable for what it was, but mostly functioned as a promise of music to come.
The band followed that up with Terror Hungry the subsequent year, and it was much more of the same - good, solid, back-to-basics thrash. Fun, fast, talented; but not revolutionary or genre-breaking in a significant way. Lost Society was another thrash band living in the shadow of the legacy of Lazarus A.D, and the brief but stratospheric rise of Power Trip.
It was easy back then to tacitly nod and say ‘well, that’s what they are.’
Here at BGM, we talk a lot about the evolution of artists - how to ride the nearly impossible balance of sounding like yourself, but not being stale within that sound. Few artists even attempt to make alterations mid-career, and the bands who have achieved it in the metal sphere are luminary and few - Metallica (for good or ill,) Iron Maiden, Anthrax (during the Bush era)...without wasting undo time ruminating on it, those are the ones who come to mind.
Lost Society has defied the odds. Not just an evolution, but a complete re-invention.
And so we come to their new record, Hell Is A State of Mind, and for those who left the band behind as settled law after their initial run, make sure to come back and try them again. Somewhere between 2014 and 2026, the band went back into the lab and cooked up an entirely new affect. Their new brand is still metal, surely, but more melodic, more accessible, borrows more from rock, and does a superior job of creating a feeling than all their thrash grasping ever did.
To go back into their catalogue now is to see the steps - 2020’s self-released No Absolution, and then 2022’s If The Sky Came Down show the birth pangs of the re-invention, but what they really do is speak to the six-year (and probably more,) meandering, experimental journey to get to the point of this new record in 2026.
First point first - that is not to say that Lost Society is no longer a thrash band. Halfway down the record is “Kill the Light,” and even with the big chorus and the brittle melody, Lost Society leaves no doubt in the chugging riff that this is still a band who can get down with a buzzsaw guitar and a headbanging anthem. That’s only the first half, though - the back half of the tune is something else entirely - an anthemic power romp with keyboards, chorused vocals and something approaching stringed instruments. Thrash, sure, but something indelibly more.
This kind of melding synthesis is present throughout Hell Is A State of Mind, including on what may be the album’s best cut. “Synthetic.” The band pulls every string they can think of and weaves them together into something dramatic, heavy and dire. It’s as unique and enjoyable an amalgam of sounds as ideas as any metal band has released in recent years.
That’s the key here - the blending of elements into a greater whole - and the title track, placed last on the record, is the culmination of all nine songs that have come before. It’s a thrash version of something that would sound at home capping off a Lord of the Lost album, with all the gravitas and rafter-rocking that comes with that comparison.
Okay, there will be a camp out there that says “doesn’t this kinda sound like Avenged Sevenfold?” And that’s not without merit. The counter to that, though, is 1) is that so terrible? And 2) never mind the heavy use of synth orchestrals that A7X has never truly dipped their toe in, the undercurrent of true thrash chops that Lost Society brings to bear and builds this album on, gives it an edge, a grit that few other modern, melodic bands can readily compare to.
Not every song on the album is perfect, that goes practically without saying - but there’s an awful lot of admirable songcraft here, as it seems every second or third song makes the listener go ‘huh, didn’t see that coming.’ And when a band can do that, can make the listener guess at what’s next when they’re already more than a dozen years into their career, that’s cause for celebration. Let that be the object lesson - never assume you know all that a band can be.






