This is a 2CD deluxe version of Bloc Party’s Four. ‘FOUR’ was a triumphant and much-welcomed return of one of the most important and loved acts to emerge out of British guitar music in the noughties. The bonus disc is their EP of new material called “The Nextwave Sessions”. Born and shaped on the road during the bands worldwide tour in 2012, which saw the formative UK four piece playing the biggest headline shows of the career, including a 19,000 capacity sold out show at Earl’s Court, the five songs that comprise the EP are a natural continuation of Bloc Party’s much-welcomed return to the UK music limelight.
The band worked with renowned producer Dan Carey (whose credits include records with Bat For Lashes, Lianna La Havas and Hot Chip) on the two tracks that open the EP – ‘Ratchet’ and ‘Obscene’. ‘Ratchet’, the lead track off the EP and one of the groups’ punchiest, most confrontational and viciously danceable tracks to date.
Across its 5 tracks, the EP amalgamates the visceral energy of the bands live shows with bright studio sheen, and Kele's lyrics and vocals at their most uncompromisingly biting. From the slow-motion, trance-haunted balladry of ‘Obscene’ to the shimmering swells and skipping percussion of ‘Montreal’, to ‘French Exit’ that is fuelled by the bands trademark sharp angular riffs and combustible dynamics, and ending on a grand and impassioned note with the forward-looking ‘Children Of The Future’ – the ‘NEXTWAVE sessions' is essential, unmissable Bloc Party.
Review
When Bloc Party went on a lengthy hiatus after the release of their third
album Intimacy, it didn't seem like they needed to get back together. The
band's members had moved on, with Kele Okereke releasing his solo album The
Boxer and bassist Gordon Moakes forming the group Young Legionnaire. More
importantly, it seemed like Bloc Party had said its piece, but Four – an
album title that reflects the years between the band's albums, the number of
its members, and its place in Bloc Party's discography – shows
there's more life in their music than most would have predicted. The bands from
the post-punk/angular movement of the early 2000s that thrived were the ones who
evolved; Bloc Party knew this as early as A Weekend in the City, when they
began adding more electronic elements to their sound. This led to some strong
moments on that album and Intimacy, but it also felt somewhat obligatory,
following the Radiohead-blueprint way for a forward-thinking rock band to push
itself. Yet Bloc Party push harder on these songs than they have in years, and
there's barely a synthesizer or sequencer to be found. Four is far harder-edged
than any of their music since Silent Alarm or their early EPs, and they spend
equal time in familiar territory and breaking new ground. “So He Begins to
Lie,” with its lumbering, angular riffs and political overtones, could have
easily appeared on their debut, while “V.A.L.I.S.” and the excellent single
“Octopus” distill everything great about their pop side – precise
melodies, spring-loaded guitars, expertly deployed tension and release – into
songs that seem poised for flight. Meanwhile, ballads such as “Day Four” and
“Truth” are pretty but a touch predictable, serving more as breathers
between the album's onslaughts than as attractions in their own right.
Four's real star is guitarist Russell Lissack, who unleashes hesher-friendly
riffs and solos with the pent-up fury of a four-year break behind him. He gives
“Team A”'s menacing dance-punk extra heft and fuels “3×3”'s anguished
tug-of-war with churning riffs that make it one of the album's most thrilling
moments. Things get even gnarlier on “Kettling,” which boasts surging riffs
that recall P.O.D. and other X Games favorites, and on “Coliseum,” which
begins as a bluesy shuffle and ends as a metallic grind that would do Helmet
proud. It's awkward, but it's also interesting and completely unlike anything
they've done before. Songs like this and the album's closing rant “We're Not
Good People” show just how much fight there is in this album, and in Bloc
Party; they sought new life in their music and their collaboration, and they
found it. Four may not be as cohesive as Silent Alarm, but it just might be
more vital.