Jady Turn Pain Into Power On Their New Album 'Silver'
- Victoria Pfeifer

- Oct 6
- 1 min read
Updated: Oct 8

Columbus alt-rock duo Jady have officially hit their breakthrough moment with Silver, a record that feels bigger, heavier, and more emotionally grounded than anything they’ve done before. It’s not about chasing trends or trying to sound like anyone else. This album is straight-up therapy through distortion pedals and heartbreak.
From the jump, you can hear the band stepping into a new kind of confidence. Jarrett Doherty and Ashton Bergdorf don’t hide behind production tricks or fake edge. Silver is honest to a fault, the kind of record that says, “Yeah, we’ve been through some shit, and we’re not pretending it didn’t happen.”
The songs hit a balance most alt bands can’t find. It’s clean but raw, emotional but still ready to blow out your speakers. There’s that arena energy running through it, not because it’s commercial, but because it’s earned. They’ve done the grind: 150+ shows, multiple tours, real sweat equity. You can hear every late-night drive and existential crisis baked into this thing.
Production-wise, it’s stacked. Heavy names like Erik Ron, Curtis Peoples, and Sam Tinnesz help polish the sound, but they don’t sand down the edges. There’s still that Midwestern bite, that “we built this from nothing” tension that makes each chorus hit harder.
What makes Silver work is how human it is. The lyrics dig into honesty, imperfection, burnout, and self-discovery without ever feeling whiny or fake-deep. It’s an album about growth, the kind that hurts before it heals.
By the end, you’re left with something that’s both personal and massive in scope. Silver isn’t just their next chapter; it’s the start of Jady’s headliner era.


