The
synth outburst immediately announces the song’s allegiance to Post-Punk sensibilities.
The synth’s sonic eruption carries “String of Luck” to the first verse, which
features a purposeful vocal presentation and percussive drive. The drumming is forceful
and consistently present, contrasting well with the more delicate and strategically
timed, yet equally commanding, guitar.
The
single from zeronic is the second release from their upcoming album, “Modernism.”
The ten-track album is scheduled for release on October 2, 2026. While explaining
the meaning of “String of Luck,” the band said:
“The song captures that feeling of collectively waiting for something to happen — in places where life moves a little slower, there can be a sense that life is unfolding somewhere else. A string of luck becomes less about individual success and more about the hope that something unexpected might come along and lift the whole room."
While
composing “String of Luck,” the aim was for a consistent pulse and flow
that carries the listener forward, mirroring the anticipation running through
the lyrics. As they put it, "One of the biggest challenges was
resisting the urge to overcomplicate the arrangement and instead trusting the
song's momentum. Looking back, it's probably one of the tracks that
stayed closest to its original idea from the very beginning.”
Zeronic
is based in Austria. The band is fronted by Mik
Tanczos (vocals, synth, guitar). The credits of the early release from the “Modernism”
album ("The Hope And The Enemy”) identified the other two members of zeronic as Rainer
Kossits (guitar) and Paul Trummer (percussion).
“String
of Luck” by zeronic
“The song captures that feeling of collectively waiting for something to happen — in places where life moves a little slower, there can be a sense that life is unfolding somewhere else. A string of luck becomes less about individual success and more about the hope that something unexpected might come along and lift the whole room."
Website: https://www.zeronic.net/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/zeronicmusic/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zeronicmusic/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/zeronicmusic/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zeronicmusic/
Quoting
interestingly helpful information about the upcoming album:
At its core, Modernism wrestles with what it means to live inside constant acceleration. The ten tracks circle the same handful of questions: how to stay close to people while everything pulls toward distance, how optimism and disillusionment can sit in the same breath, what it means to belong somewhere while also wanting out. The band isn't interested in dismissing the modern world outright — instead, the record sits inside its contradictions, finding something worth holding onto even amid the unease.
The album took a full year to write, and the process was anything but tidy: roughly twenty-five songs and sketches were worked on before the band narrowed things down to the ten that made the cut. What's notable is how little resistance the material put up — the songs found their shape quickly, and the sessions carried an openness that the band hadn't felt in years, closer in spirit to their earliest days than anything since. Musically, the record swings between stripped-down, guitar-forward moments and bigger, more layered arrangements, pulling from both ends of zeronic's catalogue. Despite its title, Modernism isn't really fixated on technology or progress as subjects — it's interested in the people trying to live alongside them, and the ways they keep reaching toward each other regardless.
"Modernism is about trying to remain human in a world that's constantly being optimised," the band explains. "The songs explore the tensions of modern life — connection and isolation, progress and disillusionment, belonging and escape. But beneath those ideas, it's really a record about people trying to hold on to what matters and find one another."
At its core, Modernism wrestles with what it means to live inside constant acceleration. The ten tracks circle the same handful of questions: how to stay close to people while everything pulls toward distance, how optimism and disillusionment can sit in the same breath, what it means to belong somewhere while also wanting out. The band isn't interested in dismissing the modern world outright — instead, the record sits inside its contradictions, finding something worth holding onto even amid the unease.
The album took a full year to write, and the process was anything but tidy: roughly twenty-five songs and sketches were worked on before the band narrowed things down to the ten that made the cut. What's notable is how little resistance the material put up — the songs found their shape quickly, and the sessions carried an openness that the band hadn't felt in years, closer in spirit to their earliest days than anything since. Musically, the record swings between stripped-down, guitar-forward moments and bigger, more layered arrangements, pulling from both ends of zeronic's catalogue. Despite its title, Modernism isn't really fixated on technology or progress as subjects — it's interested in the people trying to live alongside them, and the ways they keep reaching toward each other regardless.
"Modernism is about trying to remain human in a world that's constantly being optimised," the band explains. "The songs explore the tensions of modern life — connection and isolation, progress and disillusionment, belonging and escape. But beneath those ideas, it's really a record about people trying to hold on to what matters and find one another."

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