Everything Is Alive (album) explained

Everything Is Alive
Type:studio
Artist:Slowdive
Cover:Slowdive - Everything Is Alive.png
Genre:Shoegaze
Length:41:37
Label:Dead Oceans
Producer:Neil Halstead
Prev Title:Slowdive
Prev Year:2017

Everything Is Alive is the fifth studio album by English rock band Slowdive, released on 1 September 2023 through Dead Oceans. It is their first album in six years and their second since reforming, following their self-titled album released in 2017.

The album received critical acclaim and was commercially successful throughout Europe, reaching the top ten in Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand and the United Kingdom.

Background

Slowdive entered the studio in September 2020 to begin recording their fifth album.[1] The band originally booked studio sessions for April 2020 that were cancelled as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] During the pandemic, the band suffered the loss of Rachel Goswell's mother and Simon Scott's father. Neil Halstead, who wrote all of the album's songs, said that the music was more of an "escape" from the darkness that the band's members were going through.[3] Goswell struggled with alcoholism in the wake of her grief before entering sobriety.[4] "I thought it was going to be quite a dark record but once we got together as a band, I think some of that darkness lifted and some of the tunes became a bit lighter," Halstead said.[5]

The album arose from material that Halstead wrote with modular synthesizers in 2019 for a planned electronic solo record.[3] [5] He was unsure of the song "Kisses", which was ultimately released as the album's lead single, as it felt "too pop" for him.[3] The instrumental "Prayer Remembered" originated from an arpeggiated synth line before Scott filtered guitar leads through a Max patch system.[6] Halstead flew out to Los Angeles to mix the album with producer Shawn Everett, which resulted in the drums becoming "dirtier sounding".[6]

Critical reception

Everything Is Alive received a score of 82 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on 20 critics' reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". Editors of AnyDecentMusic? gave it a score of 7.9 out of 10 based on 20 reviews. Uncut called it "the Slowdive you've been waiting for", while Mojo described it as "evocative rather than vivid in a way that evokes Faith-era Cure's greyscale atmosphere", calling it "the sound of Slowdive still holding their impressive earthly form". The Skinnys Lewis Wade summarised Everything Is Alive as "another Slowdive release that does little to alter their position as stalwarts of the nebulous shoegaze scene. Emotional textures are evoked through gauzy vocals and guitar reverb, with just a few tweaks to the formula here and there".

Irina Shtreis of The Quietus wrote that it "appears to be more immediate and transparent than its predecessor" and "while at first listen Everything Is Alive might seem plain and minimalist, its flavours can be savoured for a long time".[7] Dana Poland of Slant Magazine opined that while it "may not boast the lo-fi grit of Slowdive's earlier work", nevertheless "the band's skill for scrupulous melodies is undiminished here. The album evolves Slowdive's well-established sound with more electronic textures, creating a conceptual sonic landscape that buzzes with life".

Dave Simpson of The Guardian gave a favourable review of the album, comparing some songs on the album to early New Order and commenting that "the band deserve much credit for sticking to their guns and proving a lot of people wrong". David Murphy of MusicOMH described it as a "joyful listen", writing that it "tak[es] the cloud tunnel bliss of the best shoegaze and add[s] some pure pop pleasure".[8] Clashs Robin Murray found Everything Is Alive to be "at times experimental, it forever returns to their core values, with this tension supplying some of the album's finest moments", concluding that it is "enchanting and illuminating, [and] proves that Slowdive's pulse is still beating strong".

Joe Goggins of DIY stated that "listening to Everything Is Alive, you get the sense that the veteran shoegazers couldn't rush something if they'd tried" as it "very much gives off the sense that the slower gestations lead to the richest rewards". Reviewing the album for Spin, Jonathan Cohen commented that the album's "maturity and depth of feeling transcends genre and style—something that's sadly rare from guitar-based rock'n'roll at this late date".[9] Wayne Carey of Louder Than War called it "easily the best album of their career" as it is "heavy with experience, but each note is poised, wise, and necessarily pitched to hope".

Tim Sendra of AllMusic characterised Everything Is Alive as "equally experimental and accessible, brimming over with aquatic atmosphere and pointed emotional feeling, and full of familiar joys and new surprises", calling it "the work of a group who are done reforming and have set their sights on brilliant evolution instead". John Garratt of PopMatters opined that "from the haunted guitars to the impressionist vocals, from the most spell-binding drones to the brisk tempos, this is a Slowdive album through and through".[10] Pitchforks Jayson Greene felt the "music is wispier, more skeletal, attuned to and aware of fading glories" as "the length feels purposeful and personal, like these songs are sketches from a journal Halstead and Goswell left open" and "the love songs feel lonelier, the landscape more unforgiving".

The Guardian ranked it the 45th best album of 2023.[11]

Personnel

Slowdive

Technical

Charts

Chart (2023)! scope="col"
Peak
position
Japanese Hot Albums (Billboard Japan)[12] 96
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[13] 10

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Slowdive drop hints that album number five is on the way. NME. Brereton. Greta. 21 September 2023. 9 September 2023.
  2. Slowdive's Rachel Goswell on the Band's New Album, Coping With Hearing Impairment & Her Hopes for Meeting Siouxsie Sioux. Billboard. DiGiacomo. Frank. 30 August 2023. 9 September 2023.
  3. Slowdive Are More 'Alive' Than Ever. Spin. Lindsay. Cam. 1 September 2023. 9 September 2023.
  4. News: Slowdive: 'A journalist said we'd be stacking shelves in Tesco within six months'. The Independent. Nugent. Annabel. 4 September 2023. 9 September 2023.
  5. Slowdive Interviewed: 'We've always tried to work as a pretty solid democracy'. Mojo. Harrison. Ian. 8 July 2023. 9 September 2023.
  6. Web site: Reunited Shoegaze Legends Slowdive Prove Everything Is Alive. Grammy.com. Enos. Morgan. 6 September 2023. 9 September 2023.
  7. Web site: Slowdive – Everything Is Alive. The Quietus. Shtreis. Irina. 29 August 2023. 30 August 2023.
  8. Web site: Slowdive – Everything Is Alive Album Reviews. MusicOMH. Murphy. David. 31 August 2023. 6 September 2023.
  9. Slowdive Soothes And Stuns On Everything Is Alive. Spin. Cohen. Jonathan. 30 August 2023. 6 September 2023.
  10. Web site: Slowdive's Everything Is Alive Is a Masterpiece of Subtlety. PopMatters. Garratt. John. 30 August 2023. 6 September 2023.
  11. News: The 50 best albums of 2023 – 50 to 41. The Guardian. Snapes. Laura. 5 December 2023. 6 December 2023.
  12. Web site: Billboard Japan Hot Albums – Week of September 6, 2023. Billboard Japan. ja. 6 September 2023.
  13. Web site: NZ Top 40 Albums Chart. Recorded Music NZ. 11 September 2023. 9 September 2023.