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Terror Fear The Panic
Terror Fear The Panic | Photo Derek Rathbun
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Terror Release ‘A Deeper Struggle’ Documentary As ‘Still Suffer’ Lands

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Terror aren’t easing into anything, they’re hitting full force.

As the hardcore mainstays unveil their documentary ‘A Deeper Struggle’, they’re also dropping their tenth album ‘Still Suffer’, out now via Flatspot Records.

The two releases land side by side, both built on the same foundation: longevity, pressure, and refusing to drift from what made them matter in the first place.

24 years of staying locked in

Filmed during their Latin America tour in January (this year), ‘A Deeper Struggle’ runs for around 20 minutes, cutting between live footage and direct reflections from the band, check it out below:

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It traces Terror’s path from their early days through to the making of ‘Still Suffer’, without trying to romanticise it, what comes through instead is endurance, a band that’s stayed rooted in hardcore while others have peeled off or faded out.

There’s no reinvention arc here, just a clear look at how they’ve kept going.

‘Still Suffer’ is out now, and it hits hard

Alongside the doc, ‘Still Suffer’ is officially out in the world, marking Terror’s tenth full length, it doesn’t shift their formula, it sharpens it.

Terror 'Still Suffer' artwork
Terror ‘Still Suffer’ artwork

Terror ‘Still Suffer’ Tracklist

  1. Erase You From My World
  2. Still Suffer
  3. Promised Only Lies
  4. Destruction Of My Soul
  5. Fear The Panic (feat. Chuck Ragan)
  6. Death Of Hope
  7. Beauty In The Losses (feat. Jay Peta)
  8. A Deeper Struggle
  9. To Hurt The Most
  10. Deconstruct It (feat. Brody King, Dan Seely)

Pick up your copy here.

The record leans into everything they’ve built their name on: tight, aggressive songwriting and an uncompromising tone. Tracks like ‘Destruction Of My Soul’ and ‘Death Of Hope’ sit alongside collaborations with Chuck Ragan, Brody King, and Dan Seely, adding weight without diluting the core sound.

At this stage, Terror aren’t experimenting, they’re refining.

Still built for the stage

If the documentary reinforces anything, it’s that Terror still exist for the live setting, that hasn’t changed, and it doesn’t look like it will.

They’re currently deep into a North American headline tour with Pain of Truth, End It, and Start Today, before heading into a dense European run later this year.

For a band this far in, there’s usually a pivot point, Terror never took it. ‘A Deeper Struggle’ and ‘Still Suffer’ make that clear, this is a band that chose consistency over comfort, and they’re still standing because of it.

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