Have A Nice Life - Sea Of Worry Review
Switching
one's brain for different genres of music is a harrowing task, increasingly so
when analyzing it. When your taste exists almost solely in one corner of the
ring, the others seem foreign, challenging, and often inferior. This subculture
of elitism in music is rampant online, with the various metal subgenres often
being involved in the discussion.
Have A Nice
Life is a non-metal band that I have grown to love, but in an
unconventional way. After delving through online communities in search of the
most highly regarded and well-crafted albums ever, Deathconscioussness,
the Connecticut-based experimental rock duo’s 2008 debut album, kept coming up.
After listening to one of the members depressive singer-songwriter solo
projects an excessive amount (Dan Barrett’s Giles Corey), I eventually
decided to find out what all the hype was about regarding Have A Nice Life.
While I will
not be reviewing the monolithic masterpiece of a double album that is Deathconsciousness,
or its more-than-adequate successor, 2014’s The Unnatural World, it
is important to note the sonic and physical progressions the band has taken
over the course of their almost 20 year existence.
Deathconsciousness is a lengthy and challenging listen that tests the patience of
many, but rewards those who can withstand its melancholic and repetitive use of
synthesizer loops and disheveled production to uncover a difficult hour and
thirty minutes dedicated to depression and the inescapable spinning wheel of
time. Post-punk tracks like “Bloodhail,” “Waiting For Black Metal Records To
Come In The Mail” and “Deep, Deep” act as hooky guitar driven bangers nearly groovy
enough to dance to, where more shoegaze and post-rock influenced songs like
“The Big Gloom,” “Hunter” and “I Don’t Love” slam you with a wall of despondent
noise that are sure to make you turn your head downward and think about your
own reality.
The Unnatural
World felt like a stripped down and simplified
version of their first release, echoing similar songwriting sentiments
throughout, while also interweaving the contrasting rhythm and atmosphere
portrayed on Deathconsciousness. After a six-year gap, fans were not
disappointed with the album, and although in my eyes, not as iconic, The
Unnatural World was a fit addition to the HANL catalog.
Five years go
by and now we have Sea of Worry. It is strange that after only a few
months, this two-piece’s previous albums had enough of a profound effect on me
that this release eclipsed priority of new music by both British veteran
funeral doom legends Esoteric and Swiss avant-garde black metallers Schammasch,
groups I have listened to for years (Note: Both A Pyrrhic Existence (Esoteric)
and Hearts of No Light (Schammasch) are great releases that you
should listen to!). Something about the mix of
goth-rock/post-punk/shoegaze/drone that Have A Nice Life culminates
resonates with me in a strangely cathartic way, and I knew that from the moment
I started listening to his new album, something was different.
And the
internet knew so too.
Reading some
opinions from die-hard fans across the world had me discouraged. Those who had
received access to the album before myself claimed that the album sucked.
Uninventive, neutered, derivative and tedious are not used when positively
voicing your opinion on anything, especially not music. So, when I pressed play
at 12:01 on November 8th, I was excited, but cautious.
From the
get-go, this is neither of their previous albums. Sea of Worry is almost
inarguably the weakest of the groups three releases, but by a small margin.
While The Unnatural World just surpasses it in my eyes, and Deathconsciousness
leaps and bounds above both, this album is still great. It, like its oldest
brother, cleanly separates the post-punk and shoegaze/drone tracks but in turn
isn’t afraid to go all out on those songs to compensate. “Sea of Worry,”
“Dracula Bells” and “Trespassers W” crave to be grooved to, whether it’s a
subtle head sway or full-on dancing. “Science Beat”, “Everything We Forget” and
“Lords of Tresserhorn” are emotive and somber tracks that leave a deep sense of
longing that dig into your feelings.
Post-punk is
based almost solely on loops, and Have A Nice Life are no strangers to
reinventing and upholding this tenant of songwriting in their music. The guitar
riffs and melodies provide almost a meditative state, until they crunch with
noise and return you to the oddly unsettling vibe permeating the entire record.
“Lords of Tresserhorn” is a highlight in the track list, with its curious piano
melody providing an eerie backdrop to Tim Macuga’s chunky guitar tone and
hypnotic sung vocals by Barrett which steal the track and escalate it to a
noisy climax extremely reminiscent of tracks like “Earthmover” and “Holy
Fucking Shit: 40,000” from Deathconsciousness.
13-minute
closing track “Destinos” is haunting and addictive, and interestingly begins
with a
distressing sample of a pastor describing the philosophical problem of
hell, in which the existence of Hell is a stark inconsistency in the image of a
truly benevolent God. While the Lord has appeared many times in Have A Nice
Life’s music, “Destinos” stands as the most blatant example, to its
advantage. Barrett outlined the production of the song on his blog, starting
even as far back as 2006, stating:
“For a song about my typical agoraphobic
anti-social bullshit, it sounds a lot like dead people waking up under the
ground and trying to claw their way out to set the cemetery on fire. That, and
it routinely breaks my computer because it involves about 1400 tracks of audio
and is 11 minutes long.”
He explains later in the post that the song shows that it doesn’t matter
what you want, because after you are dead, all your creativity and effort is
put into the hands of some other force, which can use it in whatever way they
please. This afterlife, however, is less frightening than knowing this while
still alive, which is what this album is all about.
Sea of Worry is starkly
different than its predecessors, as its sheen production and more accessible
sound is indicative of the band’s growing audience, but one thing will always
remain poignant and powerful with the group: Barrett’s nihilistic and defeatist
lyrics. While not accompanied with a 70-page booklet outlining Antiochean
history like their first album, this album’s lyrics are still as depressing and
intriguing as they have been and will most likely remain this way for the
band’s foreseeable future.
This is not the album I was expecting Barrett and Macuga to make as a
follow-up to The Unnatural World. Before the
three singles were released, I expected a noisy, shoegazing drone album that
would probably bore me into listening solely to their first two releases.
But that
reality is so far from the result.
This band’s
music is not for everyone. I know many who think most of the group’s material
is too boring and bloated. But fear not, Sea of Worry is a catchy and
refreshing take on the Have A Nice Life formula, and while it may feel
to simplified and cleanly produced for the veteran group, it still provides
engaging and emotive songwriting that challenges the listener’s opinion on this
band, as well as it cements Barrett and Macuga as forces to be reckoned with in
the ever-growing post-punk landscape.
-
Final Score: ‘We’re
machines that breathe and weep and look really good’
Favorite
Tracks: “Science Beat,” “Lords of Tresserhorn,” “Dracula Bells”
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