A New Chapter: The Evolution of ‘Falling Joy’
Released today, 8 May, alongside a fresh music video, The Fismits’ latest single, “Independence,” serves as the second milestone on the road to their upcoming EP, Falling Joy (arriving 26 June). While the previous single “Scars” laid down the project’s emotional foundation, “Independence” takes a bold step forward. It is more than just a sequel; it is a shift in direction—exploratory, unpredictable, and deeply revealing.
Breaking the Indie-Alternative Mould
The track is a departure from the band’s traditional sound, trading standard riffs for electronic textures, looping rhythms, and a subtle new-wave pulse. While the familiar indie-alternative roots are still visible, they now support a more fluid, expansive sonic identity. It’s the sound of a project refusing to stay inside a box.
From the Archive to the Present
The story behind “Independence” spans decades. Originally written in the early 1990s and tucked away in The Mind Theatre archives, the song held onto its potential for over thirty years. Rather than treating it as a vintage relic or a nostalgic throwback, Mark Biagio chose to completely reimagine the track. This isn’t just a revival; it’s a total transformation.
Experimentation in the Studio
Recorded during sessions throughout 2024 and 2025 at Dirty Badger Music, the production reflects a raw, instinctual approach. Biagio—who handled production, mixing, and mastering; prioritised experimentation over polish. The result is a dynamic arrangement that breathes, moving effortlessly between quiet restraint and powerful release.
A Modern Lens on a Mid-90s Legacy
Within the context of the Falling Joy EP, “Independence” bridges the gap between the past and the future. The project revisits Bruce Barrett’s mid-1990s material, but filters it through the lens of modern experience. It isn’t just archival work being dusted off; it is old soul-searching reconstructed for a new era.

The Arc of the Artist
As the project moves toward its final singles, “When,” “Too Small A Word,” and the title track “Falling Joy“, a clear emotional arc is forming. It is a journey from reflection toward resolution, though that resolution is left open for the listener to interpret.
Since their formation in 2016, The Fismits have transitioned from a three-piece band into a focused creative vessel for Biagio’s vision. While past releases like Halen (2024) documented their growth, “Independence” feels like their most definitive statement yet: a commitment to following creative instinct over industry expectations.
The Lingering Question
In a world that often rewards the familiar, “Independence” asks a difficult question: When a song carries decades of history, does reinventing it strengthen its soul, or does it risk erasing the very spark that made it special? For The Fismits, the risk itself seems to be the point.