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TVAM
Ruins
The follow-up to High Art Lite, Ruins is an album shaped by grief, reflection, and transformation; a record that captures both the weight of loss and the strange beauty that comes with it. Written after a self-imposed break from songwriting, it represents a shift in focus and perspective for Joseph Oxley. “I wanted to step away from what I thought I was supposed to make,” he explains. “The worst advice anyone can give you is, ‘If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.’ It’s always broken. It always needs fixing.”
At its core, Ruins explores loss not as emptiness but as presence, something that reshapes the world around you. The album finds Oxley wrestling with the dualities of human experience: the tension between what’s said and unsaid, between humanism and nihilism, public and private, despair and acceptance. “Hope and despair don’t cancel each other out,” he says. “They can co-exist — that’s what makes it feel real.”
Somewhere within a lifetime of repeats, reruns, and reboots, TVAM lives, crafting work that touches on our memories while toying with our fears, creating a world in which broadcast becomes performance. Since his debut album Psychic Data burst from a small bedroom studio in Wigan, TVAM has defined the sound and spectacle of nostalgia’s grip on modern life, from the sloganeering of “Porsche Majeure” to the electioneering of “Semantics,” his music has gained daytime playlisting on BBC 6 Music and has been featured on TV including groundbreaking series Succession.
A1
Comfort Collar
A2
The Gloom
A3
The Words
A4
Real Life
A5
Powder Blue
B1
Follow Me Home
B2
Winter Rose
B3
In Memory
B4
Love Like Glue
B5
Sweetness & Light
B6
The Haunted





