Music

Montreal’s The Fake Friends Capture High-Tension Energy in New Wave Anthem “The Way She Goes”

Following a string of high-octane live dates, the six-piece ensemble refines their post-punk sensibilities with a clinical yet rhythmic exploration of urban restlessness.
Alice Lange

The sonic landscape of Montreal has long been defined by its ability to merge gritty DIY ethics with a sophisticated, neon-lit aesthetic, and The Fake Friends are currently positioning themselves at the center of this evolution. Following the momentum of their previous anthemic output, the band’s latest offering, “The Way She Goes,” marks a deliberate pivot toward a colder, more precise sound. While their earlier work leaned into the raw power of distorted guitars and punk-inflected choruses, this new material embraces the angular syncopation and minimalist architecture associated with the late-70s art-punk movement.

The track functions as a psychological centerpiece for their upcoming debut long-player, Let’s Not Overthink This. Musically, the composition is built on a foundation of interlocking guitar lines from Felix Crawford-Legault and Luca Santilli, which recall the disciplined tension of bands like Wire and Pylon. This is augmented by Brad Cooper-Graham’s keyboard work, which provides a pulsating low-end frequency that anchors the song’s nervous energy. The rhythm section, comprised of Michael Kamps and drummer Michael Tomizzi, maintains a metronomic drive that prevents the track’s inherent twitchiness from collapsing into chaos.

Fake Friends - Let's Not Overthink This
Fake Friends – Let’s Not Overthink This

Produced and engineered by Jordan Barillaro at the renowned Mixart Studios—a staple of the Quebec recording scene known for its vintage gear and expansive live rooms—the single benefits from high production values that prioritize clarity and separation. The reverb tails are tight, and the mastering ensures that the “needle-sharp” precision of the instrumentation cuts through the mix without sacrificing the warmth of the analog synthesizers. This community-driven recording process, involving various practice rooms and shared creative spaces across Montreal, has infused the record with an authentic sense of place.

Lyrically, vocalist Savage navigates a world of cyclical habits and fraying confidence. The opening lines, “I’ve been living on the warpath, it’s just me, myself and I against me again,” set the stage for an emotional arc that explores the friction between self-awareness and self-destruction. The refrain, “I guess that’s the way she goes,” serves as a thematic anchor, delivered with a weary certainty that mirrors the track’s tightly controlled instrumentation.

This stylistic shift into dance-punk and post-wave territory is a natural progression for a band that has spent the last year refining its chemistry on the road. Having shared stages with legacy acts and contemporaries alike—including the Buzzcocks, Me First and the Gimme Gimmes, and Wine Lips—The Fake Friends have developed a live presence characterized by purposeful motion. This road-tested tightness is evident in the single’s 2:32 runtime, which wastes no space, moving from the initial staccato riff to the final decay with clinical efficiency.

As the band continues to expand their reach across the Midwest and East Coast, they remain a quintessential product of the Montreal underground. The city’s influence is baked into the sonic texture of the track: it is the sound of late-night motion, the cold glow of fluorescent lights, and the persistent restlessness of an artist constantly at odds with their own momentum.


Release Information:

The single “The Way She Goes” will be available on all streaming platforms via Stomp Records on January 16, 2026. The full-length debut album, Let’s Not Overthink This, is scheduled for worldwide release on February 13, 2026.

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