Nothing - A Short History Of Decay


Den 7. Platz konnten Nothing vor sechs Jahren mit „The Great Dismal“ hier erreichen. Nach einigen Umbesetzungen im Bandgefüge startet die Band von Domenic "Nicky" Palermo nun mit ihrem insgesamt fünften Album einen erneuten Anlauf auf eine Spitzenposition bei Platten vor Gericht.

„A Short History Of Decay“ atmet dabei den Größenwahn von „Mellon Collie & the Infinite Sadness“, auch wenn es sich nur um 9 Titel handelt. Es gibt opulente Streicherarrangements („Purple Strings“), mit u.a. Mary Lattimore an der Harfe, dazu noisigen Shoegaze („A Short History Of Decay“) in bester My Bloody Valentine-Tradition, entrückten, folkigen Dreampop („The Rain Don’t Care“) an der Grenze zwischen Mojave 3 und Slowdive, krachigen Alternative Rock im Breakbeat-Sperrfeuer („Cannibal World“) und immer wieder Songs in einer Qualität und Melodiösität, die Billy Corgan schon seit Jahren nicht mehr einfallen („Never Come Never Morning“).

A Short History Of Decay“ gibt es - leider nicht in einer alternativen Plattenhülle - in zahlreichen Vinyl-Varianten: Red Transparent With Glitter Vinyl, Yellow Translucent With Silver Glitter Vinyl, Clear With Black Smoke Vinyl, Bubblegum Splatter Vinyl, Jawbreaker Splatter Vinyl, Peppermint Pinwheel Vinyl, Blue Vinyl, Green Vinyl, Purple Vinyl und Candy Corn (Yellow, Orange, White) Vinyl.


 

 


The quality of A Short History Of Decay continues to build over the first four tracks, but the record really reaches its peak with “Toothless Coal”. Its hissing Linkin Park-style opening fires into a musical whirlpool, sucking you in. Palermo tries a little Chino Moreno detachment, his abstract lyrics injecting a deep sense of transience and trauma as he mourns the cost of his craft (“fluently in our decadence / poetry it petrifies me / tying me in knots”). Elsewhere, Bobb Bruno powers in on bass, whilst additional guitars from producer Nicholas Bassett give the track a shimmering, surreal edge. 
For all its confidence, not every experiment works. “Purple Strings”, for instance, drips with harp loops and string swells that, while beautiful, jar against the more cathartic aspects of Nothing‘s sound and lyrics. It’s a welcome experimentation that should have been reserved for a future release. 
Portishead, Massive Attack or Sonic Youth, this is definitely not. It’s something grittier, darker and a little chaotic, trading art-school theoretics for raw, dangerous and yet beautiful practicality. A Short History of Decay at its finest is a defiantly messy, deeply human album. It finally reclaims Nothing’s story for the better. 


 




1 Comments

Designed by OddThemes | Distributed by Gooyaabi