The Converge Love Is Not Enough (Indie Vinyl) vinyl is the format this album deserves: a full LP pressing on Deathwish Inc., catalog number DWV1 266, bringing Converge’s eleventh studio record to wax in an indie-exclusive edition.
Thirty-Five Years In, Converge Arrives Here
Converge formed in Massachusetts in the early ’90s and spent the decades since building one of the most uncompromising bodies of work in heavy music. Their approach sits at the intersection of hardcore, metal, and punk, but those genre labels only get you so far. Guitarist and producer Kurt Ballou, vocalist and lyricist Jacob Bannon, bassist Nate Newton, and drummer Ben Koller have always written music that is angular, dissonant, and physically demanding in a way that resists easy categorization. From the brutality of Jane Doe in 2001 to the atmospheric sprawl of the Chelsea Wolfe collaboration Bloodmoon: I in 2021, they have consistently pushed their own limits rather than consolidating a sound that was already working. That refusal to settle is exactly what makes Love Is Not Enough such a striking record coming from a band in their fourth decade.
What Love Is Not Enough (Indie Vinyl) Delivers
Love Is Not Enough moves with a precision and ferocity that feels earned rather than performed. The album opens hard with the title track and does not relent, closing with “We Were Never the Same” in a way that gives the full runtime a sense of arc and consequence. Bannon’s lyrics engage directly with the anger, pain, and frustration of contemporary life, and the band’s collective playing reflects that weight without ever becoming indulgent. There is no filler here. Every track justifies its place. For listeners who have followed Converge across multiple eras, this record reads as both a continuation and a refinement. For anyone newer to the band, it is as direct an entry point as anything they have released.
The Pressing
This is the indie vinyl edition, released through Deathwish Inc. under catalog number DWV1 266. Deathwish has been Converge’s label home for years, and their vinyl output consistently reflects the care the band puts into presentation. An indie pressing of a Deathwish release means limited availability outside of major retail channels, which matters for collectors who want a copy that won’t be sitting in a big-box bin six months from now. If you collect heavy music seriously, if Converge already occupies space on your shelves, or if you’ve been waiting for the right moment to bring this album home on vinyl, this is the copy to have. Albums this focused and unsparing sound better loud, and loud sounds better on wax.
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