Time, allegedly, steals. Music, on a good day, steals it back for three minutes at a time and then spends it recklessly. "Time Is A Thief" by Night Ritualz operates exactly in that tension: urgency as both subject and method, as if standing still might count as a kind of disappearance.
Behind the project is Vincent Guerrero IV, based in San Antonio, who has been steadily building Night Ritualz from the ground up with a clarity of intent that borders on stubbornness. After a self-titled debut that already mapped his territory, this second album tightens the screws. Less introspection as atmosphere, more introspection under pressure. You can feel the live dimension baked into the structure, tracks shaped not just to be heard but to push bodies forward whether they like it or not.
The opening title track wastes no time pretending otherwise. It hits with a pulse that feels both mechanical and slightly anxious, like a clock that has developed opinions. Synths cut clean lines through the mix, while Guerrero’s voice sits somewhere between confession and command. There’s a lineage here, sure, with echoes of Depeche Mode in the melodic sensibility, but also something rougher, closer to the abrasion of At The Drive-In filtered through electronics.
“Living In This Bed” and “Watching TV” compress that tension into shorter forms, almost impatient in their brevity. These aren’t songs that linger; they arrive, state their case, and leave before you’ve had time to fully process them. It works, mostly because the album understands momentum as a narrative device. Slowing down would mean breaking the spell.
Then “Ya No Está” shifts the emotional register without softening the impact. The bilingual approach isn’t decorative, it’s structural. Spanish and English don’t alternate politely; they coexist, overlap, reshape the emotional weight of each line. It’s a subtle but important refusal to flatten identity into something easily consumable.
“Brown Skin” is the album’s most direct statement, and also its most exposed. There’s no attempt to disguise its intent behind abstraction. It speaks plainly about identity, survival, and visibility, which in a genre often obsessed with mood over meaning feels almost confrontational. Not comfortable, not meant to be.
“Un Tiro” pulls in the opposite direction sonically, leaning into a kind of early-’80s indie-pop lightness that almost feels suspicious in this context. But the contrast works. It’s not relief, exactly, more like a different shade of tension. Meanwhile, “Whoreish” dives headfirst into harsher territory, industrial textures grinding against EBM rhythms with a kind of controlled aggression that suggests the dancefloor as both release and battleground.
The shorter “Cluster” acts as a brief rupture, a fragment that resets the ear before the album’s final stretch. By the time “Cupid Is A Cuck” and “My Baby, My Love” arrive, there’s a noticeable shift toward something more vulnerable, though “vulnerable” here still wears a leather jacket and keeps its guard up. Emotion is present, but negotiated, filtered through rhythm and distortion.
What holds "Time Is A Thief" together is its sense of purpose. Guerrero’s self-described “fuck wave” tag might sound like a joke you’d regret explaining, but it captures something real: a refusal to behave, to settle neatly into darkwave, EBM, or post-punk categories. The album thrives in that friction, where genre becomes less a container and more a set of pressures acting on the music.
There are traces of Deftones in the way atmosphere and intensity blur into each other, but Night Ritualz is less interested in immersion than in propulsion. This is music that moves, insists, sometimes shoves.
Not subtle, not particularly interested in being timeless either. Ironically, that’s what might give it some staying power.