Album reviewsDinosaur Pile-Up

Album Review : Dinosaur Pile-Up I’ve Felt Better

Dinosaur Pile-Up Return with Defiant Power

Six years of silence. Six years of pain, grit, and transformation. Today, Dinosaur Pile-Up break the dam with the release of their long-awaited fifth studio record, the I’ve Felt Better album—out now via Mascot Records. It’s not just a comeback; it’s a reclamation. A sonic exorcism. A declaration that survival can sound like a riot.

I’ve Felt Better Album : A Mantra Turned Manifesto

Frontman Matt Bigland didn’t set out to write a concept album. He set out to survive. The phrase “I’ve felt better” began as a dry deflection during a period of intense illness—when speaking was painful, and explaining felt impossible. But over time, those three words calcified into something more: a mantra, a mirror, and ultimately, the title of the I’ve Felt Better album.

“This record is about triumph over adversity through perseverance and resilience,” Bigland shares. “It’s an epitaph to a defining part of my adult life. But I’m just delighted I’m on the other side of it, and it’s now memorialised in solid rock.”

I’ve Felt Better Album : The Sound of Survival

The I’ve Felt Better album is a 12-track barrage of catharsis, empowerment, and raw alt-rock muscle. From the explosive opener to the final note, Dinosaur Pile-Up sound like a band reborn, leaner, louder, and more emotionally precise than ever.

Lead single “’Bout to Lose It” kicked off the campaign with a feral scream of intent. “My Way” followed, blending hip-hop swagger with punk venom, a middle finger to industry gatekeeping and performative authenticity. “Big Dogs” skewers celebrity culture with gleeful abandon, while “Sick of Being Down” channels existential dread into a garage-punk gut punch.

Each track on the I’ve Felt Better album feels like a chapter in a survival memoir, brutal, honest, and ultimately uplifting.

Empowerment Through Chaos

If there’s a thematic throughline to the I’ve Felt Better album, it’s empowerment. Not the glossy, hashtag-ready kind, the kind forged in hospital beds, in isolation, in the quiet moments when giving up feels easier than pushing forward.

Bigland’s vocals are more urgent than ever, his lyrics stripped of pretense. The production is tight, punchy, and unafraid to let the distortion bleed. There’s no filler here, just 12 songs that demand to be heard, felt, and screamed along to.

“I’m super proud of the songs and of the record as a whole,” Bigland says. “The response so far has been so awesome and positive. And now we get to take these songs out on the road and see everyone’s response face to face. It’s gonna be awesome.”

Album Review : Dinosaur Pile-Up I've Felt Better

UK Tour and Global Momentum

To celebrate the release of the I’ve Felt Better album, Dinosaur Pile-Up are hitting the road with a five-date UK headline tour this September:

  • 5 Sep – XOYO, Birmingham
  • 6 Sep – Electric, Bristol
  • 9 Sep – Garage, Glasgow
  • 11 Sep – New Century Hall, Manchester
  • 13 Sep – Electric Ballroom, London

Following that, they’ll join A Day to Remember and Yellowcard for a full-scale US tour from 22 October to 22 November—bringing the I’ve Felt Better album to American audiences hungry for catharsis and chaos.

I’ve Felt Better Album – The Rock News UK Verdict: 10/10


I’ve Felt Better is the kind of album that doesn’t just mark a return, it redefines it. Dinosaur Pile-Up have taken the wreckage of illness, isolation, and existential burnout and forged a record that’s equal parts therapy and thunder. Every track feels like a fist raised in defiance, a riff-soaked reminder that survival isn’t quiet, it’s loud, messy, and worth celebrating. From the snarling stomp of “Big Dogs” to the surf-scorched ache of “Quasimodo Melonheart,” this is an album that doesn’t ask for your attention, it grabs it by the collar and screams, “We’re still here.” It’s been a long time coming, but I’ve Felt Better was worth every second of the wait.

For longtime fans, this is the payoff. For newcomers, it’s the perfect entry point. And for the band, it’s a milestone etched in distortion and defiance.


Neil@rocknews.co.uk

Album Review : Dinosaur Pile-Up I’ve Felt Better@RockNews

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