“Indie pop goes prog” – at first it sounds like something cobbled together from a press-kit cliché generator. But Lyra-La by the Karlsruhe-based band Naria surprisingly turns it into something that actually works as a concept.
The opening immediately makes an impact: “They Can See Nothing But Sea” and “Dreams, Candles And Batteries For Breakfast” are real earworms. Alternative-prog earworms, somewhere between indie, early Genesis-style acoustic moments, a touch of Haken affinity, and a pleasantly cerebral catchiness – with subtly woven-in post-hardcore twists à la Dredg. Not dominant, but always present as a point of friction.
The vocals: an indie/emo variation of Ross Jennings – less polished, more edge. It fits.
In general, this is an album that refuses to be pinned down. Indie, prog, folk, bubblegum punk, emo – it’s all there, but none of it settles into a single category. The title track “Lyra-La” forms the calm core: somewhere between Bon Iver, Steven Wilson, and the softer moments of The Mars Volta.
“Adrenaline Drip And Outer Walls” tips things toward math rock and post-hardcore, while “On Waves From Below” almost drifts entirely into indie folk territory. “Eucaryota” feels like a deliberate collage experiment, blending indie, punk, and a latent King Crimson spirit.
Between these poles sit the two interludes “Epiphany Of A Drowning Man” and “Archaeon”: short, atmospheric transitions that feel more like states than songs – and precisely for that reason help stabilize the album’s structure without drawing attention to themselves.
And then comes “Three Kelvin,” which fully goes its own way: offbeat, with hints of Balkan, klezmer, and who-knows-what, structurally escalating – somewhere between Gazpacho, Between The Buried And Me, and a brief visit from Mike Patton in full loss-of-control mode.
Not everything is equally strong. “Wax Phobia I” gets a bit lost in its own expansion, while Part II feels much more focused. Lyrically, everything remains within a space of water, dreams, and memory: fragmented imagery, loss of control, reality as something permeable. There’s no clear thread – more a conscious drifting.
All in all: not a polished album, and that’s exactly what makes it so compelling. To me, one of the most intriguing alt-prog releases of recent years, precisely because it constantly dares not to know what it wants to be.”
Rating: 12/15 points
Check out the original review/article here: https://www.betreutesproggen.de/2026/04/naria-lyra-la/
Great review of Lyra-La on Betreutes Proggen
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Growing Global Airplay: “Lyra-La” Reaches Progressive Rock Audiences Worldwide
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Great review of Lyra-La on Betreutes Proggen
25. April 2026
Growing Global Airplay: “Lyra-La” Reaches Progressive Rock Audiences Worldwide
19. April 2026
Review in ‘Il Manifesto’, Italy
18. April 2026
New review from the Netherlands
18. April 2026
Thank you Darren for featuring our new album ‘Lyra-La (Continuous Mix)’ on loud enough? magazine
3. April 2026
HeavyMag from Down Under shares Naria News
30. March 2026
New shop online!
12. March 2026
Thank You! Live at Tempel, Karlsruhe
9. February 2026