Seether are heading back under the skin of The Surface Seems So Far, announcing a new EP titled Beneath The Surface and releasing its first cut, ‘Into The Ground’.
Released April 17th as a digital only release, the EP acts as a companion piece to the band’s latest album, pulling from the same sessions but leaning harder into the darker corners, pre orders went live March 20th, landing alongside the new single and lyric video.
‘Into The Ground’ feels like a natural extension of that record’s weight. It’s brooding, stripped of any gloss, and driven by the kind of tension Seether have built their career on, there’s nothing nostalgic about it, if anything it sounds like a band still digging for something unresolved.
Seether ‘Into The Ground’
Unreleased cuts and live firepower
At its core, Beneath The Surface is built around two previously unreleased studio tracks: ‘Into The Ground’ and ‘Proud Daddy’, both come from the original album sessions, offering a glimpse into what didn’t make the final cut but still carries the same emotional punch.
They’re backed by live recordings of ‘Lost All Control’ and ‘Judas Mind’, captured during a SiriusXM Octane session, these versions strip things back just enough to expose the band’s chemistry without losing the grit. It’s a reminder that Seether have always thrived in that space between precision and rawness.
The EP isn’t trying to reinvent the band, it sharpens what’s already there, closing out this album cycle with something that feels deliberate rather than leftover.

Seether ‘Beneath The Surface’ EP Tracklist
- Into the Ground
- Proud Daddy
- Lost All Control (Live at SiriusXM Octane)
- Judas Mind (Live at SiriusXM Octane)
Find out more and pre save here.
Still standing, still heavy
Two decades in, Seether aren’t chasing relevance, they’ve already carved that out. With a catalogue stacked with gold and platinum releases and a run of No. 1 rock radio hits, they’ve earned the right to move at their own pace.
Shaun Morgan’s songwriting still leans into that grunge rooted DNA, but there’s a steadiness to it now, and while Beneath The Surface might be framed as a companion release, it feels like a nice way to close out the story without tying it up too neatly.
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