Slowdive - Everything Is Alive -2023- - Album A... Jun 2026
The album closes with "everyone knows," a six-and-a-half-minute epic that refuses to fade quietly. Starting as a lonely piano ballad—imagine Nick Drake dropped into a cathedral—it slowly accretes mass. By the four-minute mark, the distortion swallows the melody whole, only to spit it out again, clean and pure, as the final chords ring out.
The album’s creation was deeply influenced by the profound personal shifts experienced by the band members during the COVID-19 pandemic. Recording sessions, originally scheduled for April 2020, were delayed as the world shut down. During this period, the band suffered significant losses: Rachel Goswell’s mother and drummer Simon Scott’s father both passed away in 2020. Slowdive - everything is alive -2023- - album a...
From the opener “shanty,” the listener is submerged in shimmering guitar haze, but there’s a newfound clarity in the production. Neil Halstead and Rachel Goswell’s vocals drift like ghosts through layers of melody, yet the rhythms feel more grounded—almost krautrock-influenced on tracks like “prayer remembered.” The album balances loss and light, written partly in the wake of personal grief, but it never wallows. Instead, it finds a meditative, even hopeful pulse. The album’s creation was deeply influenced by the
This is the closest the album gets to a “single.” Driven by a motorik, krautrock-inspired beat reminiscent of Neu! or early Kraftwerk, “alife” is surprisingly danceable—if you define dancing as swaying in a dark room at 2 AM. The guitar melody is infectious, a two-note hook that burrows into your brain. Halstead sings, “It’s alright to be alone,” turning a lonely sentiment into a communal anthem. From the opener “shanty,” the listener is submerged
Here’s a short write-up on Slowdive’s 2023 album everything is alive :
, creating the music served as an "escape" from the emotional weight of those years. Artistic Evolution