Suspended between fear and acceptance: Sektion Tyrants' "Permanent Existence"

Suspended between fear and acceptance: Sektion Tyrants' "Permanent Existence"

Vancouver post-punk / synth punk duo Sektion Tyrants released "Permanent Existence" on Bandcamp on June 10 — the lead single from their forthcoming second album. Recorded in 2022, mixed and mastered in 2025 by Jason Corbett of ACTORS, the track opens on dream-lit synths before hardening into taut punk territory. Post-Punk.com premiered it with a full write-up. A three-year production arc that sounds like it was worth the wait.

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2026/6/11 · 23:32
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Genre: post-punk / synth punk Released: June 10, 2026 · Bandcamp (self-released, digital single) From: Vancouver, BC, Canada

There's a particular mood in "Permanent Existence" that takes a moment to place — a quiet dread that doesn't quite resolve into alarm. It opens on pulsing, dream-lit synths, and the vocals arrive with the cold restraint of classic post-punk, the kind of delivery that suggests something important is being held back rather than performed. By the time the guitar hardens and the song lifts into sharper punk territory, the feeling has a name: you're being swept somewhere and didn't choose to go. 1
That's exactly what the band says it's about. 2

Who Sektion Tyrants are

Sektion Tyrants formed in Vancouver in 2018: Steve Ferreira on vocals, synths, and programming; Caleb Blagdon on guitar and synths. They describe themselves as "a post punk/synth punk duo" whose music explores the electronic frontier of post-punk and new wave. 1 The reference points they name — Tubeway Army, Tones On Tail, The Cure — aren't nostalgia choices; they're coordinates that mark the specific territory the duo actually occupies: the late-'70s and early-'80s moment when punk bands started replacing guitar leads with synthesizer runs and found that the electronics made the urgency feel stranger rather than softer. 2
Their Bandcamp catalogue runs to eight entries, including a self-titled debut album, Last of the Wild Ones, Instant Hit, and Systematic Letdown. 3 The gig list is an indirect signal of where they sit in the underground circuit: they've shared stages with The Chameleons, Pink Turns Blue, March Violets, Nuovo Testamento, Xeno & Oaklander, and Riki — a roster that spans goth rock, coldwave, and post-punk's more electronic wing. 2 Post-Punk.com has characterized their overall body of work as moving between melancholy, introspection, love, loss, and existential unease, and asserts they've established themselves in the contemporary alternative underground scene. 2
Sektion Tyrants band photo — Steve Ferreira and Caleb Blagdon
Steve Ferreira and Caleb Blagdon, photographed for the Permanent Existence release 2

What "Permanent Existence" sounds like

Post-Punk.com places it somewhere between Flowers for Agatha (a short-lived Scottish post-punk group, circa 1984) and Lowlife (another Scottish post-punk / darkwave act from the same era) — a lost '80s cult single that somehow turned up in 2026. 2 The comparison earns its keep. The synths in the first half have that slightly queasy, hovering quality you get from early Gary Numan records — not yet fully electronic, still unsure whether it's making a song or a signal. Ferreira's vocal delivery carries what Post-Punk.com describes as a Gavin Friday-esque (Gavin Friday — the Irish post-punk vocalist best known for The Virgin Prunes) dramatic quality: theatrical without tipping into camp, controlled enough to feel genuinely uneasy. As the track progresses, Blagdon's guitar adds weight, the goth-rock texture thickening until the thing that began as a brooding ambient statement ends somewhere distinctly more physical. 2
The Bandcamp tags — darkwave, postpunk, punk, synthpop, synthpunk — map the genre spread accurately, which is unusual: most self-applied tags are wishful thinking. 1
Sektion Tyrants' Bandcamp artist photo — two dogs lounging on a Soviet Polivoks synthesizer, black and white
From Sektion Tyrants' Bandcamp artist page: a Polivoks synthesizer in the studio 3

The production story: three years, two studios

The production timeline for this single tells you something about how the song was built. "Permanent Existence" was tracked in 2022 at Noise Floor Recording Studio by Jordan Koop — Koop is also known as part of Twin Crystals (a Vancouver indie project), which means the session had a built-in understanding of the local underground's particular sonic habits. 1 The mix and master weren't completed until 2025, handled by Jason Corbett (ACTORS) — the frontman and producer of ACTORS, the Vancouver post-punk / darkwave act, at his Jacknife Sound studio. 1
A three-year gap between tracking and final mix doesn't signal shelved material. It suggests patience: the song existed before it sounded the way it was supposed to sound. Corbett's involvement is the relevant variable — ACTORS' production aesthetic leans toward clarity within density, letting synthesizer layers breathe without flattening them. The Jacknife Sound treatment gives "Permanent Existence" a finish that sits closer to 2025 than to the era it references, which is the right call. Pastiche sounds like pastiche; this doesn't. 2

Why it lands now

The band's own account of the lyrical origin is specific:
"The song was written at a time when the world felt suspended between fear and acceptance. It wasn't intended as a political statement as much as an observation of helplessness, uncertainty, and the feeling of being swept into a future nobody had chosen." — Sektion Tyrants 2
That framing — passive, systemic, nobody to blame — is a better fit for post-punk's tools than for any other genre's. Post-punk was built to carry exactly that register: the feeling that something happened and you can't point at the person who did it. The song doesn't resolve that feeling. It holds it, which is the harder thing to do.
"Permanent Existence" is the first single from a forthcoming second album — no release date yet announced. 2 A single produced with this amount of care — three years in the making, mastered by one of the Vancouver scene's most respected engineers — is a reasonable indication the album will be worth waiting for.

Listen

Permanent Existence single artwork — swirling red and black ink illustration on cream ground
"Permanent Existence" single artwork 1
Stream, preview, and download at sektiontyrants.bandcamp.com/track/permanent-existence — pay what you want (minimum $2 CAD), with unlimited streaming and lossless downloads up to 24-bit/48kHz included. 1 Bandcamp direct keeps the full cut with the artists.

Cover image: "Permanent Existence" artwork via Sektion Tyrants on Bandcamp

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