Underlined Passages Confront Collapse on The Accelerationists

A new chapter from Baltimore’s indie veterans

After more than a decade of crafting layered indie rock, Baltimore trio Underlined Passages—Michael Nestor (guitar, vocals, keys), Roger Stewart (drums) and Joseph Marcus (bass)—return on October 17, 2025 with their most focused record yet. The Accelerationists, out digitally and in limited vinyl and cassette formats via Mint 400 Records and underlineslove.com, compresses the band’s sound into eight tightly wound songs. It follows 2024’s Landfill Indie, shedding that album’s warmth in favor of more stripped‑down arrangements shaped by exhaustion, disconnection and the grinding systems that surround us.

Underlined Passages’ core influences remain intact—shoegaze textures, 90s college‑rock melody and slowcore mood—but the production here, recorded partly with legendary producer J. Robbins at Magpie Cage and longtime collaborator Frank Marchand at Waterford Digital, is raw and unpolished. The result is a record that feels like a late‑night drive: drenched in distortion one moment, washed in chorus‑soaked melancholia the next. Where Landfill Indie traced survival, The Accelerationists captures momentum—what it feels like when promised futures collapse but we continue to hurtle forward.

Themes of acceleration and stasis

The title isn’t theoretical. In interviews the band has cited the broken optimism of Wired’s long‑ago “Long Boom” and the emotional flatness examined in Adam Curtis’s HyperNormalisation as static in the background. These futurist manifestos promised endless growth; The Accelerationists arrives in their wake to ask what happens when those futures fail but the systems keep speeding up. The lyrics stay clipped and interior, allowing guitars and bass to carry the emotional weight. It’s music about standing still inside collapse—how to maintain presence when life moves too fast to matter.

Track‑by‑track highlights

  • “Endsong” – The album opens with Stewart’s crisp, muscular drumming and a hook that sticks immediately. Nestor’s guitar skirts the edge of feedback, bending into melody as if daring the track to collapse under its own weight—yet it soars. The tension introduces the album’s themes: a quiet refusal to be swept away.
  • “Heywood Floyd” – Named after the bureaucrat in 2001: A Space Odyssey, this lead single anchors its futuristic subject in Marcus’ hypnotic bass line. The groove never lets up, while the chorus blooms into resigned harmonies—humanity on the brink, singing anyway. A video for the track is available now and can be viewed here. The song’s title alludes to structural observation without commentary; the band plays through the static as systems fail.
  • “Flaxxon” – At nearly four minutes, this track lets space and feedback carry as much weight as melody. It flirts with shoegaze but never loses its propulsion, reflecting symptoms and sedation in its restrained build.
  • “Aloof” – A driving, workmanlike song that yanks the listener back to earth. Its focused attack mirrors the exhaustion of holding on when momentum refuses to slow.
  • “La Dolly Vita (Cresyl Mix)” – The lone cover, originally from The Smashing Pumpkins’ Pisces Iscariot, is raw and unapologetically loud. Distortion‑heavy guitars pay homage to the band’s ’90s DNA without drowning in nostalgia.
  • “Tyrannique” – Here, Underlined Passages sound most contemporary. Angular guitars recall the Cure’s Disintegration era funneled through the anthemic sheen of The Killers. It’s urgent and catchy, suggesting control without overt force.
  • “Somelin” – An arena‑sized rocker built on simple, hooky melody. It shows the band playing with scale and defiance while speaking in symptoms and sedation.
  • “Remainder” – The closer eases the album toward its finish with lush reverb and cinematic atmosphere. It feels like the final credits rolling on a summer film—uplifting yet haunted, leaving listeners with what’s left when nothing changes.

A record built on restraint

What makes The Accelerationists compelling isn’t just the songs but how they pair sonic muscle with thematic unease. The band tighten their sound into eight tracks that balance soaring hooks, shoegaze textures and hard‑earned perspective. Influenced by broken futurist promises, the lyrics remain personal, grounded in middle‑aged weariness and a stubborn insistence on finding beauty anyway. Underlined Passages have described themselves as “indie pop for mid‑40s Gen X,” and while that tag hints at their demographic, it undersells the punch. Their guitar‑heavy indie rock, rooted in mood and melody, draws from shoegaze, slowcore and 90s college rock; songs build, collapse and leave space for the listener. There’s no gloss or posturing, just sound shaped by feeling.

Where 2024’s Landfill Indie found the band surviving in a saturated musical landscape, The Accelerationists captures the exhaustion of a world that won’t slow down. The melodies remain, but they carry more weight; the warmth is gone, replaced by tension. It’s a record about standing still inside collapse—about how to hold presence when everything moves too fast to matter. With its October 17 release through Mint 400 Records, Underlined Passages invite listeners to sit with the static and find catharsis in the noise.