Friday, June 1, 2018

3. Everything Everything - A Fever Dream

Apparently they took their name from the first words on Radiohead’s Kid A, but despite what you might expect from me I first heard this factoid after becoming fans of Everything Everything.

This Manchester rock quartet have a unique and compelling sound, and while the first element that stands out is the incredibly over-the-top vocals (apparently lead singer Jonathan Higgs discovered his singing talent after attempting to sing like Thom Yorke and failing, another factoid that I was unaware of at the time of my introduction to the band), what drew me in the most was the exciting genre blend of busy math-rocky rhythms combined with super joyous, catchy pop hooks. My introduction to the band was their 2015 single “I believe it now” (which really doesn’t sound anything like Radiohead at all), a simple, slick, ingenious pop song which circulated heavily in my brain for months and years. I put on their previous album Get Free, which certainly showcased their unique sound, but got a bit stressful and obnoxious for my taste. I was therefore excited to not only check out last year’s A Fever Dream, but even more so to acknowledge that they’d really distilled their sound to the bare, thrilling essentials, and put together a spectacular and razor sharp album to boot. With A Fever Dream, Everything Everything create a pop symphony, music that bites you and demands attention at first, but thrills and rewards on repeat listens, and they put it on a cohesive, bordering on concept album, with dark lyrical themes and enticing unanswered questions. Hats off!


Dark cover. I feel like the idea was better than the execution.


The fairly straightforward pop songs are what carry the album on the first few listens. “Desire”, “Can’t do” and “Run the numbers” all pick up where “I believe it now” left off, with huge choruses and relatively simple song structures, keeping Everything Everything’s characteristic chaotic rhythms and busy guitar lines to a minimum. Occasionally the math rock shines through though, like on late-album highlight “Ivory tower”, and the extended outros to opening cut “Night of the long knives” and title track “A fever dream”, and I just appreciate these sections even more on repeat listens. Finally, the necessary breathers on the album with relatively gentler pace reveal themselves as some of the brightest gems now that I’ve played the album to bits. Songs like “Big game”, “Good shot, good soldier” and “Put me together”, exploring the full range of their dynamic capacity, from ethereal ambience and soothing crooning to beautiful crescendos to manic climaxes, really showcase Everything Everything’s versatility and matured songwriting. These songs are experimental, exciting and dramatically different from anything else I listen to, but simultaneously easy on the ears, flowing beautifully in the context album – no easy feat.

The lyrics on the album are not to be passed by either. As the title suggests, they are much more sinister than the music, and the contrast is an effective one. Societal divides, the current political and sentimental landscape, and generally a pretty depressing outlook on our future are the main themes. "Desire" might sound like the title is meant as "Lust", but you realize that the song could rather have been called "Greed" after the opening phrase "I want this planet and I want it now". Other themes haven't popped out at me before reading up on it now, but "Big game" is undeniably a Trump diss written in Trump's own kindergarten style, and "Run the numbers" reads as quite a painful pro-Brexit song (the pain being in 'us sensible people' failing to understand the anger and reaction of 'the others'). On the more personal side, songs like "Good shot, good soldier" manage to combine this critical outlook on world order with internal crises, in frankly quite an overwhelming way. The repeated howls of "I've been sleeping!" on "Put me together" really drive home the message of the album, and while I kind of wish it would offer some advice other than A) hope it's just a dream you'll wake up from, or B) ask for help from God, I don't feel that a lack of Confuscian wisdom subtracts from my experience.


Image result for everything everything band
Fashion isn't one of their strengths. That's OK.

The two final songs are by far the least exciting on the album. I guess they provide some relief after the intense “Ivory tower” and some emotional closure from the heavy lyrical themes, but I tend to play them much less. However, a companion EP A Deeper Sea was released this spring, with two remixes and two new songs, whereof especially “The Mariana” is a worthy addition to the album’s magnificent oeuvre.

A Fever Dream is one of those delightfully creative pop albums that just brims with ideas (I get vibes from of Montreal, Grimes, or Janelle Monaé's best), and then manages to rein them in just enough. While it's impossible not to be pulled along by their enthusiasm, it could have been too much and gotten exhausting after a while. Alternatively the restraint could have just made it dull, but this album ends up hitting the sweet spot in between.  It becomes more than a showcase of creativity, succeeding in forming a focused, coherent and important statement.

Wallowing in despair has seldom been as much fun.


Best tracks: "Run the numbers", "Ivory tower", "Good shot, good soldier"





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