News | National
20 Nov 2024 15:29
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    How The Cure went back to their gothic roots for their new number one album

    Dark and light collide in this new album that harks back to some of the band’s best work

    Neil Cocks, Associate Professor in the Department of English Literature, University of Reading
    The Conversation


    At Shrewsbury train station, there is a poster advertising The Cure’s new album, Songs of a Lost World. The confident, monochrome minimalism of the art is at odds with the rambling Victorian brickwork, yet there is a kind of sympathy there also.

    At ten on a November morning, the station isn’t the most joyful of locations and so is a suitable home for a record praised for its wintery desolation. The poster helps here.

    The cover art features a sculpture called Bagatelle from 1975 by the Slovenian artist Janez Pirna, which the cover’s designer chose because he pictured it “floating in space, almost as a distant relic from a forgotten time”. It also includes a new custom font, called Cureation, which is distressed and austere, and references the font used originally by the band. Like the station, these choices call upon a previous age – a lost world.

    Songs of a Lost World is The Cure’s first album in 16 years. Reaching number one in the UK and now the US, some might argue it casts a pall of darkness over the pop charts; others might say it glitters a little in their reflected light. This has always been the way with The Cure.


    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    On one side of their catalogue, we have what is known as the “unholy trinity” of early albums Seventeen Seconds, Faith and Pornography: alienated, austere, thematically dark. On the other, the shambling psychedelia of The Top and Kiss Me, the latter also featuring the blissed-out pop that helped this quintessentially English band find success in America.

    In his recent book Goth: A History, the band’s former drummer Lol Tolhurst charts the genre from its 18th-century literary beginnings to its modern musical incarnation. In it, he describes how The Cure’s sound sits within this history through its unexpected influences, which range from record producer Phil Spector’s “wall of sound”, the production technique behind pop hits for The Ronettes and The Supremes, to the poetry of TS Eliot.

    While Tolhurst locates the band’s sound within the gothic, frontman Robert Smith has consistently rejected the label. The difficulty in framing the band and this new album as gothic is that, like The Cure, the gothic has always been made up of contradictions.

    Although nostalgic for medievalism, the gothic employs imagery that was called on by the theorist Karl Marx when discussing the alienating effects of modernity, from the “spectre … haunting Europe” in The Communist Manifesto to the “vampire life” of capital in Das Kapital.

    Developed in part as a reactionary response to the revolution in France in 1789, it can be politically radical. Patriarchal, yet polymorphously perverse, pared down and baroque, glamorous and gauche, the gothic is an aesthetic devised of opposing forces.

    Songs of a Lost World could be seen as a return to the darkness of The Cure’s early material. Take the lead single Alone. The lyrics turn, thematically, on death and isolation. The music has the intensity and sense of glacial doom that speaks to the fatalism and claustrophobia common to novels such as Frankenstein and Confessions of a Justified Sinner, as much as classics from the “unholy trinity” including 100 Years and A Forest.

    Sinking by The Cure.

    The song most clearly echoed in Alone, however, is Sinking, from The Cure’s shuffling, electronic masterpiece, The Head on the Door (1985). Both songs are lengthy and stately. They let the listener wait for most of their length before introducing Smith’s brief and despairing vocals. Despite the pared-down instrumentation of both tracks, the sound created has a density that calls upon the “wall of sound” production technique that defined The Cure’s most psychedelic and joyful recordings.

    But this pulling between brightness and darkness, “the unholy trinity” and the pop excess of the other half of their catalogue, represents the band’s gothic heart. This is what makes Songs of a Lost World goth and the Cure goth too, whether Smith likes it or not.

    The Conversation

    Neil Cocks does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2024 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     20 Nov: Lewis Hamilton will fulfil the final three races of his Mercedes career as planned - starting at this weekend's Las Vegas Grand Prix
     20 Nov: Alan Jones once seemed unassailable. What ended it was a peculiarly Sydney story of media, politics and power
     20 Nov: A suspected drug boat's missing at sea, about 50km from the top of the North Island
     20 Nov: Bob Dylan just finished what could be his last tour – but remains a defiant artist forging new ideas
     20 Nov: A coroner has ruled a tourist's drowning death in Lake Wanaka was likely due to a medical event
     20 Nov: The High Court appeal for the Mama Hooch rapist brothers won't be heard until July next year -- nearly two years after the pair were jailed
     20 Nov: About 230 jobs are on the line at Tokoroa's Kinleith Mill
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The Netflix series on last year's Six Nations is proving a useful starting point for All Blacks as they prepare to face Italy this weekend More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Westpac New Zealand's facing the heat over its commitment to climate action More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Masked thieves targeted the royal estate where William, Prince of Wales lives with his wife Catherine, Princess of Wales, and their children 15:09

    Business:
    Westpac New Zealand's facing the heat over its commitment to climate action 14:57

    Entertainment:
    Beyonce will perform the halftime show when the Houston Texans take on the Baltimore Ravens on Christmas Day (25.12.24) 14:39

    Tennis:
    Carlos Alcaraz is touting the impact of Rafael Nadal on the sport of tennis, as the Spanish great bows out for the final time 14:37

    Law and Order:
    Gisele Pelicot and her ex-husband Dominique Pelicot give final statements at French mass rape trial in Avignon 14:27

    Business:
    Financial forms of family violence affect 1 in 7 New Zealanders – but the law is lagging 14:17

    Law and Order:
    Son of Norwegian crown princess arrested for rape 14:17

    Entertainment:
    Katy Perry feels as if she has "grown up" with her fans 14:09

    Business:
    The boss of one of the country's biggest banks has revealed her own salary, as the company records a one-billion dollar profit this year 14:07

    Law and Order:
    French woman Gisele Pelicot has lambasted the cowardice of men accused of raping her - organised by her husband, Dominique over 10 years 13:47


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd