Hole In The Ground

Album: Open Wide (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Hole In The Ground" announces its metaphor immediately and then lowers you into it, shovel by shovel. The "hole" here is a dark, echoing place where heartbreak, doubt, and exhaustion bounce around until they sound like truth.
  • Inhaler frontman Elijah Hewson described the song as emerging from a kind of creative free fall. After stepping away from writing, the band returned to the studio with what he called a "blank slate," which turned out to be less empty than unguarded. The song grew out of that loosened, stream-of-consciousness mindset, ideas tumbling out before they could be neatly labeled or explained.

    Trying to explain them afterward, Hewson admits, isn't easy. He's likened the song to "something fragile growing amongst a wreckage," or "that last blurry memory you have of a person." In other words, "Hole In The Ground" isn't about despair alone; it's about the stubborn flicker of hope that survives even when everything around it looks irreparably smashed. Hewson calls it "a meditation on hope and keeping yourself awake to life."
  • Inhaler debuted the track live on October 11, 2025, at Liverpool's M&S Bank Arena during their UK tour. It was initially released as a standalone single on October 29, 2025, two days before Inhaler's sold-out Halloween performance at London's Royal Albert Hall. "Hole In The Ground" was appended to streaming editions of Open Wide a week later.
  • "Hole In The Ground" steps away from the synth-heavy, occasionally psychedelic textures that dominated much of Open Wide and returns to Inhaler's brooding indie-rock core. Fans and critics have pointed to echoes of the band's late-2010s material: songs like "It Won't Always Be Like This" and "My Honest Face," but with a broader, more cinematic sweep.
  • The track was produced by Kid Harpoon, whose résumé includes Harry Styles' Harry's House, (which won Album of the Year at both the Grammy and BRIT Awards), Miley Cyrus' "Flowers," (Record of the Year at the 2024 Grammy Awards), and albums by Florence + The Machine, Lizzo, and David Byrne. His work with Inhaler on their Open Wide album established a creative partnership that continued with "Hole In The Ground."
  • "Holes" have a long history in songwriting, usually as shorthand for despair, isolation, or emotional freefall. Alice In Chains' "Down In A Hole" uses burial imagery to describe spiritual suffocation. The National's "Afraid of Everyone" circles a similar pit of anxiety and paralysis, even without naming it outright. Even Radiohead's "Climbing Up The Walls" feels like a cousin, less about the hole itself than the panic of realizing you're trapped inside your own head. In that loose lineage, "Hole In The Ground" fits neatly: another reminder that musicians keep returning to this metaphor because, unfortunately, many of us know what it feels like to be stuck there.

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