Darkness Always Wins

Album: Everest (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Darkness Always Wins" is a slow-burning, cinematic hard rock anthem where Halestorm's Lzzy Hale reflects on life's inevitable darker turns. But rather than offering the usual pop-music pep talk ("It's fine! Everything's fine!") or slipping into full-blown despair, Hale takes a more honest route: yes, darkness often has the upper hand, but that doesn't mean you stop lighting matches.
  • Inspired by the mess of global unrest, the emotional aftermath of the pandemic, and the growing spotlight on mental health, Halestorm set out to capture a feeling that's harder to package neatly: persistence in the face of inevitable loss. Lzzy Hale said the song isn't hopeful or hopeless, but a simple recognition that while the good sometimes falls first, it's our job to keep the fire burning anyway. Or, in her words: "The war may not be won in this lifetime. But our mission is to pass the torch so that those who follow have a light to fight with."
  • "Darkness Always Wins" has the familiar glow of a vintage FM power ballad, and Halestorm throw in a few sly lyrical winks to the era, like "running with the shadows" (Pat Benatar) and "fading into black" (Metallica).
  • The song came together during a test session in Savannah, Georgia, with producer Dave Cobb (Slash, Greta Van Fleet, Chris Stapleton). The goal wasn't perfection, but raw material: to find out who Halestorm is now, not just who they used to be.

    "We went down there to see how it was working with Dave Cobb," Halestorm guitarist Joe Hottinger posted on social media. "Wrote and recorded this in two days at his then new studio."
  • Halestorm wrote the song with Nashville songwriter Aaron Raitiere (Lady Gaga's "I'll Never Love Again," Ella Langley's "You Look Like You Love Me," Lainey Wilson's "4x4xU").
  • Halestorm played "Darkness Always Wins" live for the first time with a full band during their set at Welcome to Rockville in Daytona Beach, Florida, on May 15, 2025.
  • "Darkness Always Wins" was born from a porch conversation between Lzzy Hale and guitarist Joe Hottinger. "We were talking about how we were sick of writing all these songs of, 'Here's an answer for your problem!'" Hottinger told Metal Hammer. "Sometimes, s--t just doesn't work out! And there is no way out but through."

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