Reading-based UK progressive metal band Asira return with As Ink In Water, the long-awaited follow-up to their successful debut album Efference. Released on 14th November, the new record is a bold and intimate exploration of grief, faith, and the fragility of the human experience.
Ahead of the new album, the band has released a lyric video for lead single ‘Clarity’ that you can check out here at RAMzine.
“’Clarity’ was written in the aftermath of a close friend losing their life to cancer at a young age,” explained the band. “It is a celebration of his faith, and an appreciation of how it gave him the strength and repose to face his life being cut short, believing that his next life was about to begin. The song is told from the perspective of an atheist, addressing their dying friend. Despite not believing, our narrator cannot deny the beauty and worth that faith can deliver to someone navigating their final days. It ends with the cold acceptance that the song may indeed be addressed to nobody, in the wake of the friend’s passing, yet with the warm and grateful acknowledgement that we cannot know for sure.”
With ‘Clarity’, Asira set the emotional tone for their sophomore album as a song that digs deeper into what it truly means to be human.
Created slowly and deliberately, As Ink in Water is the result of eight years of emotional and musical exploration. Much of it was recorded at ELM Studios, the personal studio of guitarist Martin Williams, giving the band complete creative freedom to shape each detail with care. The result is a record that fuses the intensity of black metal with the expansiveness of progressive rock, the textures of shoegaze, the resonance of choral music, and the deep soul of the blues. Produced with clarity and warmth, the album shifts seamlessly between dynamic contrasts and unpredictable darker structures, offering listeners a sound that is both challenging and deeply rewarding.
The album features returning drummer Sam Greenland, whose work balances aggression and control; bassist Alex Taylor, offering grounding warmth; and Lydia Williams, whose soprano voice elevates the album’s most emotionally charged moments. One track even captures the voice of Martin and Lydia’s son, Ellias, hidden within the album’s stormiest layers.
At its core As Ink In Water is about humanity, not in abstract terms, but in intimate, often uncomfortable detail. It explores mental illness, trauma, terminal illness, and displacement. Yet it never loses hope. This is a record about care, about holding space for others, and allowing ourselves to be held in return. It’s unflinching, but never cold. Through highs that shimmer and lows that crush, As Ink in Water pushes us toward something more generous, more open-hearted.
Each song tells a deeply human story of anxiety, grief, fury, compassion, and healing. From the suffocating stillness of depression (‘Silence Of Mind’), to a eulogy rooted in love and doubt (‘Clarity’), to righteous fury at injustice (‘Cauterise’), to a belief in empathy’s revival amid global crisis (‘In Sunrise’), and finally, to quiet gratitude in love’s lasting calm (‘Still’); the album traces a journey through shadow toward understanding.
Visually, the album returns to the work of artist Scott Naismith, whose vivid oil landscapes capture the tone of the music. This time, the artwork reflects not only colour and scale, but fragility, stillness, and the suspended emotion that defines the album’s darker corners.
