In a scene that too often recycles its heroes, TSS doesn’t just evolve—they mutate. Their newest offering, Would You Be My Therapy? (Redux), featuring fellow Fearless Records alchemists Windwaker, is less a rework and more a resurrection—a ritual summoning of their future sound, written in distortion, desire, and digital fire.
This isn’t just another metalcore remix. This is TSS setting fire to the map they used to follow.
The original track, which marked a creative axis shift for the French trio, already lived in a liminal space—floating between emo confession, synthwave shimmer, and industrial bite. The redux strips it bare and reconstructs it with Windwaker’s flair for kinetic chaos. The result is a genre-fluid fever dream with grooves that pulse like neon veins under skin. It’s heavy. It’s haunted. It’s unapologetically seductive.
If you’re expecting breakdowns by the book or safe, radio-slick anthems, keep walking. What TSS and Windwaker have conjured is darker and dirtier—a dance between melancholy and menace, with a backbone of phonk that makes it feel like Deftones got locked in a cyberpunk club at 3 a.m.
Kirby’s emotive vocals still anchor the chaos, but now they float in a storm of glitchy textures and siren-call melodies. Windwaker doesn’t just guest—they possess the track, bringing a manic energy that teeters between surgical precision and volatile release.
This isn’t a feature. It’s a fusion.
More than a single, Would You Be My Therapy? (Redux) is a statement of intent. TSS isn’t merely preparing fans for End of Time—they’re daring them to keep up. It’s the sound of a band refusing to sit still, daring to be misunderstood, dragging metal into a future where emotion and electronics bleed together.

So when the album drops on June 27, don’t expect cohesion. Expect combustion.
TSS is not just carving out space in modern metal—they’re detonating a new frontier.
TSS will release their new album END OF TIME, out June 27 via Fearless. Pre-order it here.

I’m Drew, the founder and editor of Front of the Stage. I have a strong love for music and photography, which started at a very young age. There’s just something I love about experiencing live music and capturing memories that will last a lifetime, and that’s how Front of the Stage came to be.