Toronto Shoegaze Outfit AloneKitty Rebuilds and Roars on “Stay The Same” From Upcoming ‘Sad Not Sad’ Album

AloneKitty

Engines make the loudest noise right as you flip the ignition. Animals roar their mightiest when their peace is broken. Sometimes starting over, leaving comfort, stumbling forward is the biggest noise we can make. Toronto’s AloneKitty writes like someone who rebuilt life brick by brick. Because that’s exactly what happened. After a period of intense personal upheaval – losing a job, a long-term relationship, and nearly everything that felt like home – AloneKitty was, yeah, alone. Untethered, with one lone familiar thing to hold onto. That thread became a lifeline. Then it became a record. Writing songs became a way to navigate from a before into an after. It wasn’t neat, it wasn’t clean, it never is. But it was honest. Like it or not.“I kind of think I lost my mind by playing these in front of other people as I feel re-traumatized or upset by what’s at the core of some of these.” Despite the name, AloneKitty is no longer going it alone. Stefan’s on drums, Mike’s on bass. “I never worry about them…which is great because I do everything else.”

Brick by brick. Layer over layer. Track on top of track. It’s a melodic wall of sound that doesn’t hide emotion, but forces it out of hiding. Instinct, tension, and release. The guitars (sometimes five or six deep) shift and surge like weather. Hooks break through like the sun, then vanish again. Think MBV, Ride, or Hüsker Dü. Where pop collides with the primal. Tracks were laid down live at Canterbury Music Company on a legendary 1976 NEVE console, the sonic Grail. No grid, no polish, just feel. “Twelve songs in two days,” as Alonekitty remembers it. “Live. Two or maybe three takes of the beds for some of the songs at most.” 

Listen on Spotify here: https://open.spotify.com/album/1WsXvfuRjazZQm39Kenb5K?si=iNi7YYEbS12ujt2x_u30oQ&nd=1&dlsi=0468aef1da9f4b7f

Produced with Josh Korody (Beliefs), mixed by Luke Schindler (Alexisonfire, Broken Social Scene) and mastered by Slowdive’s Simon Scott, the Sad Not Sad (out October 24, 2025) is both massive and painfully intimate. “Every time I opened a new song, it became my favorite,” Schindler says. “It’s something I’d have in my rotation.” Scott adds: “[Alonekitty’s] music is great and I’m playing the songs over and over.” That’s not just high praise. It’s a seismic nod from a god, a true creator of genres. From the jangle of “She Lets You Down Again” to the 10-ton blanket of “2Tired2,” the hooks are everywhere. You just have to wade in. Let it all slowly close over you. And call it shoegaze. Call it dream-pop. Call

it post-rock. But AloneKitty calls it what it is: music shaped by upheaval, fluidity, and reinvention. 

https://alonekitty.com

https://alonekitty.bandcamp.com

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