MUSIC

Foals Finds New Purpose on "Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 2"

The British indie mainstay's new album works as both a compelling new project and a more satisfying ending to the story started on Part 1.

Alex Knowles

Back in March, Foals released Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 1, a title that promised both an apocalyptic album and a story to be continued.

The British band's fifth studio album, featured on Popdust earlier this year, brandished a polished, dancified groove that transformed cataclysmic anxiety into moments of clarity and acceptance, as best seen on tracks like "In Degrees" and "On The Luna." Part 1 was about fear and eventual understan ding of an apocalypse—but now, Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost, Part 2 has arrived, dutifully picking up right where its predecessor left off: how to live in a new reality, once the world you've known comes to an end? In a sense, Part 2 is an album interested in how to move on from the end of your world.

Part 2 still lives in the same ethereal production universe as Part 1, but the rock is far more grounded and more intimate in its scope. There's a greater sense of deliberation in Foals' focus, from the music to the lyrics. There's a hardened rock edge to the tracklist, which is obvious on the echoing urgency of "The Runner." "When I fall down, fall down / Then I know to keep on running," frontman Yannis Phillippakis yowls on the refrain, and a host of synths and the chorus rush in behind his voice to blow the roof off the album.

FOALS - The Runner [Official Music Video]www.youtube.com

Their new purposeful sound drives some of the best songs Foals has released in years. The growling guitar on "Black Bull" creates horror-movie suspense, while "Dreaming Of" and "10,000 Feet" give the gentle promise of a new start after hardship. "I'll eat up all your pain, take in all the blame / Be that someone to complain to," Phillippakis promises on "Into The Surf," a surprisingly moving meditation on grief. The instrumental vignette "Surf Pt. 1" is an artful way to close the sonic loop begun on the previous album, and it sets the stage for the explosive closer "Neptune," a ten-minute bruiser with the conceptual ambition of a '70s prog-rock opera.

If anything, Part 2 is so complete on its own that it casts a shadow onto Part 1.That release was intentionally floaty and unmoored in its sound, reflecting the tension and fear of an encroaching ending, its lyrical allegory partially obscured by the streamlined production. Now, Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 2 manages to uncoil those same moments of anxiety but works hard to form a more satisfying answer. The cohesion of Part 2 makes a Foals listener wonder what Part 1 tracks "Syrups" or "Sunday" might have sounded like in this new arrangement, where the existential angst is less of a set decoration and more of a conversation. As a sequel, Part 2 doesn't just finish what was started in Part 1; its battle cry lyrics and thoughtful scope create a more forgiving story.

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Music Features

Foals Throws Apocalyptic Dance Party on New Album

The British band's fifth studio album, Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 1, explores the end of the world—and contains some of their best work in years.

festileaks.com

Foals is more than happy to tell you they haven't missed a beat.

After the departure of a founding band member, bassist Walter Gervers, and a four-year gap since their last release, What Went Down, the British band seemed more than ripe for an identity crisis. But Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost Part 1 sees Foals still working in their wheelhouse, marrying indie-pop-fuzz to an infectious beat. Part 1 turns the band's gaze outward for ten tracks, imagining a world on the edge of Armageddon, and wondering what's worth keeping us here with the end fast approaching. It's a heady concept, and the album occasionally wavers under its weight with uneven pacing and a focus on sound over lyrics, but Foals works hard to keep the apocalyptic tone compelling. "We've got all our friends right here," singer Yannis Phillippakis cries on album crescendo "Sunday"—the danceable despair of Part 1 isn't about shock value, but instead chooses the sound of grooving humanity as an answer to an impending cataclysm.

Part 1 poses some serious questions, and whether Part 2, set to be released later this year, will be a direct response to the first, or maybe a maturation of the questions themselves, remains to be seen. But Part 1, armed with cohesive sonic ease and surprisingly beautiful message, can undoubtedly carry both Foals fans and newcomers until the sequel is released.

Part 1 Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost



Matthew Apadula is a writer and music critic from New York. His work has previously appeared on GIGsoup Music and in Drunk in a Midnight Choir.


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