
Since forming in 2020, every single second of music recorded by Koyo has been
completely and utterly genuine. Formed in Long Island, New York by five childhood
friends who grew up together—vocalist Joseph Chiaramonte, guitarists Harold Griffin
and TJ Rotolico, bassist Stephen Spanos, and drummer Salvatore Argento—Koyo’s
music is the sound of Stony Brook summers flipping between Taking Back Sunday and
Silent Majority while driving to the beach, living in songs that feel just like home.
Three years after their formation—and hot on the heels of a slew of acclaimed
EPs—Koyo is now taking their next step in the hallowed halls of Long Island hardcore
with Would You Miss It?, the band’s debut album. Following in the footsteps of the
giants of hardcore, pop-punk, and emo that came before them, Koyo are aware of the
weight a debut album carries, and they’ve been slowly crafting it since the band’s
earliest days. “We really slow-cooked this record,” says Chiaramonte. “There are songs
on it that go back as far as being written just after Painting Words Into Lines came out.
Even as we were writing for Drives Out East, we knew certain songs had to be allocated
for certain things. We’d just keep them in the bank and develop them over time.”
Despite all the planning and tinkering, there’s nothing contrived about Would You Miss
It?, because there’s nothing remotely manufactured about Koyo. Every element is a
genuine representation of the people creating it, and the album was concocted in the
most authentic way possible: with five friends, all together, writing songs. “We have
great chemistry as a band and as songwriters,” says Griffin. “That’s the beautiful thing
about Koyo, that we can sort of fit into everything. We never try to box ourselves in,
because no matter what we do, it will still be us.”
To fully immerse themselves in the recording process, Koyo decamped to a barn in rural
New Jersey with producer Jon Markson (Drug Church, Regulate, One Step Closer) and
spent six weeks digging into every detail of the record. The product is songs like “You’re
On The List (Minus One),” “Message Like A Bomb (ft. Daryl Palumbo),” and “Anthem,”
tracks that build upon Koyo’s established foundation, but feel sharper, stronger, and
even more singalong ready. “This record was a labor of love,” says Chiaramonte. “Not
just because of the work that went into it, but because of all the life experiences that
shaped it. The record was a life-fulfilling, life-affirming thing to make, but it hurt a little bit
to make, too.”
That’s no metaphor. Nearly every day working with Markson was a marathon 10-hour
session with the band poring over every single detail to ensure their debut album met
their expectations. Meanwhile, Griffin was learning how to walk again after an onstage
accident precipitated a major ankle surgery. “The first week we were at the studio, I was
in a wheelchair with my foot up and could not do anything,” says Griffin. “Three of the
songs on the album were written from that wheelchair. I had a physical therapist a mile
away from the studio, so I learned how to walk while living at this farm for six weeks.”
For Chiaramonte’s part, the lyric writing process forced him to dig deep into himself.
Musically, Koyo’s songs flow out of Griffin and Rotolico as naturally as a conversation at
an all-night diner but, for Chiaramonte, writing lyrics proved to be a deeply introspective
experience. He’d drive somewhere remote and sit for hours with a notepad until what
filled the page was an honest, open-hearted sentiment. “Life’s A Pill” is a prime
example, and a perfect encapsulation of the range of emotion Koyo captures throughout
each of the tracks on Would You Miss It?.
“‘That song is about a family member of mine passing away from a drug overdose when
I was on my first full U.S. tour,” says Chiaramonte about “Life’s A Pill.” “Ultimately, I
chose to stay on that tour. I didn’t want to grieve. I didn’t want to think about it. It was all
so overwhelming that I just opted to shoulder how I was feeling, finish the tour, and deal
with it another day. I found that I started to do that with a lot of things because I started
to tour full time that year. There were so many interpersonal problems that I was just
smothering. That song dives into that. The loss, the avoidance, and what I was doing
mirrored what some people turn to drugs for. It’s a giant song about loss and escapism.”
Would You Miss It? is the kind of album that could only be made by a group of
self-proclaimed genre-obsessives. It’s why Koyo can seamlessly transition from playing
the This Is Hardcore festival to opening for Bayside, because they make perfect sense
no matter what bill they’re on. That natural musical dexterity is what fostered
collaborations with Glassjaw’s Daryl Palumbo (“Message Like A Bomb”), Vinnie
Caruana of The Movielife (“What’s Left To Say”), and Vein.FM’s Anthony DiDio (“Flatline
Afternoon”) on songs where each part was written specifically with the guest vocalist in
mind. Each person fits right into Koyo’s musical language, and expresses the range of
sounds and feelings the band can express at any given time.
Taken in full, Would You Miss It? is the coming-of-age tale of five friends joining together
to take on the world. Fueled by a love for music, and a shared creative bond, Koyo sets
the bar for the new wave of Long Island bands. As Chiaramonte notes on “Anthem,” a
lyrical love letter to Long Island scenes of the past, present, and future, “the best is yet
to come.” Pay attention, because you won’t want to miss it.
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