The Warning have opened the next chapter. The Monterrey, Mexico rock trio announced Everything's Falling, a new studio album due August 28 via Lava/Republic Records, and released Ritual as the latest preview of the record. The single follows Kerosene and Ego, which already made this cycle feel less like a reset than a pressure valve finally giving way.

Ritual leans into the band's sweet spot: heavy enough to land in the modern hard-rock lane, polished enough to carry a huge hook, and tense enough that the chorus feels like it is trying to outrun the song's own nerves. Consequence describes it as a haunting track with a big chorus, while Blabbermouth frames it around anxiety, obsession, and self-sabotage. That lines up with the band's own read of the song.

In the announcement, The Warning say Ritual is about "the fear of losing something good" and the way anxiety can convince you that disaster is waiting even when life is stable. It is a clean thesis for a band whose best songs have always made precision and volatility feel like the same instinct. Daniela, Paulina, and Alejandra Villarreal play like a unit that knows exactly when to tighten the screws and when to let the chorus breathe.

Everything's Falling follows Keep Me Fed, the 2024 album that helped push The Warning from rising-rock conversation into a much bigger lane. Blabbermouth's announcement notes the sisters as Daniela "Dany" Villarreal on guitar, lead vocals, and piano; Paulina "Pau" Villarreal on drums, vocals, and piano; and Alejandra "Ale" Villarreal on bass, piano, and backing vocals. That family-band chemistry still matters because The Warning's appeal is not just riff weight. It is the sense of three players turning arrangement discipline into drama.

The rollout also has real momentum outside the studio. Consequence reports that the band are wrapping a U.S. support run with Yungblud, then heading toward UK and European dates, with a September return to the States for Louder Than Life in Louisville. For a band built on road-tested precision, that matters. Ritual sounds engineered for the exact point in the set where the lights drop, the riff widens, and the crowd realizes the new era is already working.