EBM

 
EBM cover
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Editors
EBM

[ Pias / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 23 September 2022

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EBM, the seventh album from Editors, is their most leftfield material yet - a thrilling, unrelenting thrust of full-bodied electro-industrial rock.

Benjamin John Power's journey to joining Editors was a surprisingly organic one. He had worked on the band's last album, 2018's Violence, giving some songs a more brutal, industrial edge, the full realisations of which came out as 2019's The Blanck Mass Sessions. That same year, Editors were asked to both headline a festival in Belgium and create a bespoke set for later on in the night. They approached Benjamin to see whether he'd be up for helping to retool their songs in a dancier direction. But with the pandemic underway, the festival never happened, and Editors were left with a bunch of new ideas during the ensuing lockdowns that were designed for - as Benjamin puts it - a "dirty rave tent".

Making EBM was "a lifeline" during the pandemic, says Elliott, "something to totally get lost in." Indeed, they've created a world brimming with drama and intensity, which is exhilarating after the past few years of collective listlessness. "The songs feel like an escape," nods Tom. The album title is an acronym of Editors and Blanck Mass but also a knowing reference to Electronic Body Music, the potent sound that originated in the 1980s and which has hugely influenced Editors' new material, where the synths of bands like Nitzer Ebb, Front 242, DAF and Skinny Puppy hammer darkly. Think smoke machines, strobe lights and the smell of leather. The band has taken those influences in a distinctly Editors direction: see the soaring falsetto of standout 'Kiss', their disco-infused "crying on the dancefloor" banger, says Tom, which Benjamin adds "could almost be a Donna Summer song" if it wasn't so heavy. Or the punchy chorus of 'Karma Climb', a stomping single that pairs ghostly atmospherics with stadium-level anthemia. On 'Vibe', which is the closest thing to what you could call a 'feelgood' Editors track, Tom wanted to put a "summertime sheen" on "a song for disconnected youth". It's Editors at their most super goth, sure - but also their most pop.

Tracks:

1. Heart Attack
2. Picturesque
3. Karma Climb
4. Kiss
5. Silence
6. Strawberry Lemonade
7. Vibe
8. Educate
9. Strange Intimacy