With self-production, it's either make it or break it. At least that's what they say.
In the case of Foals, they certainly made it: eagerly awaited by critics and the public alike, with their fifth album, everyone expected the definitive takeoff of a band that has all the right ingredients to be that blessed link between indie and mainstream that many have longed for. And professionals in the industry must be thrilled, as they have been searching for years for someone to join Arctic Monkeys at the top.
With the help of Brett Shaw (Florence + The Machine's latest among others in his rĂ©sumĂ©), Yannis Philippakis and company (notably missing their bassist Walter Gervers, who amicably left the band in January 2018) opted for a very ambitious project called âEverything Not Saved Will Be Lostâ: the first part is out now (comprising ten tracks), with the second part coming in autumn.
And ambition, for once, goes hand in hand with quality: âEverything⊠Part 1â is exactly the record one would expect from Foals. An album that harmoniously combines the past, present, and future, touching on territories already explored in the past by the British band (the airy âMoonlightâ recalls the marvelous âTotal Life Foreverâ, the aggressive âWhite Onionsâ combines the math beginnings of âAntidotesâ with the rock of âWhat Went Downâ with a dash of Bloc Party's âSilent Alarmâ era, the first single âExitsâ merges everything together by balancing the ingredients excellently) but with a keen eye on what will come next.
This album certainly plays it safe, but it doesn't shy away from experimentation: if âOn The Lunaâ (straightforward indie rock dominated by triumphant rhythm changes) and âSundayâ (which starts like a piece by Embrace only to explode suddenly into an interlude that seems taken straight from the rowdiest Underworld) sound familiar yet fresh (not surprisingly, both were released as singles), âCafĂ© DâAthensâ surprises with marimba and solo Thom Yorke vibes, âSurf Pt. 1â is a brief atmospheric instrumental interlude, while âI'm Done With The World (& It's Done With Me)â closes with a dark piano and voice piece.
A great record, this âEverythingâŠâ: a fully won bet for Warner (which has grasped the British band, no longer a gamble) and a great rubbing of hands for the press, who were eagerly searching for the new Arctic Monkeys.
The final word goes to the public, but everything seems to point towards a (deserved) triumph.
Best track: CafĂ© DâAthens