The Cure - Songs Of A Lost World

I’ll tidy this up a bit:

Alone, Endsong, I Can Never Say Goodbye all 10/10.

A Fragile Thing - 9.5/10
And Nothing Is Forever - 9/10
Fugue - 9.5/10
Warsong - 10/10
Another Happy Birthday - 8.5/10

Warsong compared to the 2004 b-side Your God Is Fear.

Fugue compared to The Last Day of Summer & A Letter To Elise.

For those unfamiliar:

 

Wednesday, October 9, 2024​

A Fragile Thing update​


From HispaCure:

En plataformas (spotify, apple music...) a las 21.00 horas (España) El sencillo viene con "Video Lyric".

El single, en formato físico, a la venta en noviembre, solo se podrá comprar vía web.

Translated from Spanish by Google

#THECURE RELEASES NEW SINGLE "A FRAGILE THING" TODAY (09.10)

On platforms (spotify, apple music...) at 9:00 p.m. (Spain) The single comes with a "Lyric Video".

The single, in physical format, on sale in November, can only be purchased online.
 
Should be in about 6 hours from now:

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1. Disintegration
2. The Head on the Door
3. Pornography
4. Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me
5. Wish
6. Seventeen Seconds
7. Faith
8. The Top
9. Three Imaginary Boys
10. Bloodflowers

11. Wild Mood Swings
12. The Cure
13. 4:13 Dream

Let’s hope the new album will at least make the top-10 :)
I'll play:

1. Faith
2. Pornography
3.The Head on the Door
4. Disintegration
5. Seventeen Seconds
6. Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me
7. Three Imaginary Boys
8. The Top
9. Wish
10. Bloodflowers

11. The Cure
12. Wild Mood Swings
13. 4:13 Dream

Admittedly this reflects my declining interest around the turn of the millennium.
 
Official track listing, a new surprises:

ALONE

AND NOTHING IS FOREVER

A FRAGILE THING

WARSONG

DRONE:NODRONE

I CAN NEVER SAY GOODBYE

ALL I EVER AM

END SONG
 
Looks like it will actually be titled “Endsong” since it’s been written that way up to this point. It just has that space there due to the font style they’re going with.
 
“A Fragile Thing – it’s the 'love song' of the album, but it’s not really a love song in the way that Lovesong is a love song... it’s about how Love is the most enduring of emotions, the most powerful of emotions, incredibly resilient... and yet at the same time incredibly fragile.”

 
Track list as written on the official site if you scroll down a bit:

Tracklisting
01 /ALONE
02 /AND NOTHING IS FOREVER
03 /A FRAGILE THING
04 /WARSONG
05 /DRONE:NODRONE
06 /I CAN NEVER SAY GOODBYE
07 /ALL I EVER AM
08 /ENDSONG

For song tagging purposes:

01 - Alone
02 - And Nothing Is Forever
03 - A Fragile Thing
04 - Warsong
05 - Drone:NoDrone
06 - I Can Never Say Goodbye
07 - All I Ever Am
08 - Endsong

I think the most confusing one is Drone:NoDrone, as the art piece Robert submitted (with lyrics from the song on it) was listed as Drone: No Drone … with spaces. Check that out here: https://craigjparker.blogspot.com/2024/09/drone-no-drone.html

Unless the title is some play on words that will make more sense once we hear the entire song, and it will become apparent whether it should contain spaces or not. In the meantime, it has no spaces according to the official website.

Here is the lyrical transcript from what we can see:

Drone:NoDrone

I’m breaking up again
I feel it in the air
I’m really not sure
What to say
I don’t remember
Being there at all…

Yeah I know
There’s no question
That I was
But the answers that I have
Are not the answers
[That I?] want
 
New Order and NIN comparisons:


1: Alone

The lead single had already created a buzz among Cure fans, with a feeling that the band might be back to their best following 4:13 Dream, their going-through-the-motions let-down from 2008. (“Happy and comfortable”, Pitchfork commented, scathingly.) Here Smith is at his most epically introspective – that’s when he finally turns up, cresting a crestfallen riff at three minutes and 30 seconds. It’s slow, sad and brilliant, while the lyrics offer a signpost to the angst to follow as Smith declares, “This is the end of every song we sing. The fire burned out to ash, the stars grown dim with tears.”
[ Alone, The Cure’s first new song in 16 years, is a huge aching sigh of darkness that brings great comfortOpens in new window ]

2: And Nothing Is Forever

Another shiver-inducing six-minute-plus dirge begins with strings and piano and a zigging guitar from Reeves Gabrels, the former David Bowie sideman who joined The Cure in 2012. The vibe is autumnal, while propulsive drum fills by Jason Cooper suggest Phil Collins drifting through deep space. The temperature is further lowered by Smith’s vocals, which arrive two minutes and 50 seconds in and are addressed to a loved one out of reach. “I know that my world is growing old,” he laments. “Promise you’ll be with me in the end.”

3: A Fragile Thing

The bassist Simon Gallup is out front as the LP gathers pace with a squalling goth workout that taps into the dread of Cure classics such as A Forest. We’re joining Smith at a challenging time – lockdown blues, perhaps? – as he wonders if it is his destiny to feel isolated and blue. “All this time alone has left me hurt and sad and lost,” he says.

4: Warsong

There are echoes of The Cure’s adored hit Lovesong in this shimmering and very 1980s affair, on which Smith’s amorphous guitar conjures with Pink Floyd and Cocteau Twins. It starts with a sustained droning note, overlaid with a glitchy guitar. The lyrics are a cheerful interpolation of Taylor Swift’s Shake It Off. Only joking: it’s back to the record’s themes of isolation and creeping dread as Smith tells somebody close in his life that “we tell each other lies to hide the truth”. Someone needs a hug – and it’s you, the listener.

5: Drone No Drone

The Cure summon the spirit of their acolytes Nine Inch Nails on a rare high-tempo number that features the closest thing on the LP to a singalong chorus, as Smith chants “Down, down, down ... Yeah ... I’m pretty much done.” Please don’t say that, Robert – there are three more songs to go!

6: I Can Never Say Goodbye

Smith takes his time again on a six-minute-plus tune that is mainly about the lugubrious guitar and frosty keyboard. But when the singer materialises, two-plus minutes in, he has a lot to get off his chest on a howling ballad that directly addresses the death of his brother. “There’s nowhere left to hide ... Down on my knees, empty inside,” Smith cries. “Something wicked this way comes, sealing away my brother’s life – I can never say goodbye.” This unflinching mediation on loss is perhaps the album’s starkest moment (and, yes, that is saying a lot).

7: All I Ever Am

The funereal pace picks up slightly amid stacks of buzzing guitar and a chunky riff that recalls New Order circa their 1985 LP Low-Life (in turn heavily inspired by The Cure). You could almost sing along to it – if it weren’t for lyrics that want to cry on your shoulder (“all I ever am is never quite all I am”).
[ Lol Tolhurst: We had seen the disease of Thatcher’s Britain. The Cure was inevitableOpens in new window ]

8: Endsong

The Cure opened Disintegration, their best album – Smith, at least, considers it their masterpiece – with the magisterial Plainsong. Now, with the 10-minute Endsong, they attempt the same feat in reverse via a slow, throbbing howl of a song in which Smith, who is now 65, confronts the ageing process only to find that it’s confronting him right back. “I’m outside in the dark ... wondering how I got so old,” he sings. “It’s all gone ... nothing left ... all I loved.” Like so much else on this extraordinary album, it’s hugely moving – but the darkness is at moments overwhelming. It’s also a fitting conclusion to an LP that has no rainbows or silver linings – just endless rain clouds and the constant threat of another thunderstorm.
 
Originally titled “Kill The Sun” -

 
Just listened to A Fragile Thing a couple of times, another great song.
So 2 out of 2 so far. :)
After several years I went back to listen to The Cure (2004) and 4:13 Dream (2008) this morning, to see if my opinion on these albums was too harsh, but nope, they remain largely unlistenable.
To come back with an album of such quality as Songs Of A Lost World after almost 3 decades since the last enjoyable one (in my opinion), is not just remarkable, I believe it's pretty much unique.
 
Another artwork done by Robert - Warsong:


Oh it’s misery
The way we fight
For bitter ends
We tear the night in two
I want your death
You want my life
We tell each other lies

To hide the truth
And hate ourselves
For everything we do
Is shame
Wounded pride
Vengeful anger
Burning deep inside

Poison in our blood
And pain
Broken dreams
Mournful hopes
For all we might have been

All misunderstood
But no way out of this
No way for us
To find a way to peace
We never found before
However we regret
All we will ever know
Is bitter ends
For we are born to war
 

Another track by track review​


From Radiowise UK:

“Alone”

We are in the era of streaming platforms and increasingly shorter songs and the Cure release a 7-minute single with 3 and a half minutes of instrumental intro: this alone gives the measure of the world in which they move.

Guitars, rhythm and synths that intertwine, then the voice that enters (“This is the end of every song that we sing”): it is the song that started the project of this album, born during Robert Smith’s nocturnal walks and from the feeling of overwhelm and disorientation that the singer always says he feels at a certain point in the night.

A song that brings the Cure back to the atmosphere of “Disintegration”, giving both the thematic and sonic tone to the album: dark, compressed, epic.


“And nothing is forever”

Piano and strings in crescendo, then the guitar, then the rhythm: another very long instrumental intro, over 3 minutes. “And nothing is forever” is one of the songs already played live in recent years: in the studio version it becomes even more powerful and emotional. Smith describes it as a song about mortality, about the promise of being at someone’s side in the most difficult moment. difficult: “Promise you’ll be with me in the end/ Say we’ll be together with no regret/For however far away” and again “And I know, I know/For my world has grown old/And nothing is forever /And I know, I know”.


“A fragile thing”

“Nothing you can do to turn it back she said/ Nothing you can do but sing/This song is a fragile thing/ This song is my everything/But nothing you can do to change the end”: “A fragile thing” is a song about the choices you make and the consequences they have on the other people around you.

It was played live for the first time in Milan two years ago: the introduction this time is short – less than a minute – and features bass and drums. While in the central part you can feel the presence of the guitar more, with beautiful embroideries (by Reeves Gabrels?) that make the song more effective than the live version.


“Warsong”

I start with a pump organ, an instrument already used in the past – as in the start of “Untitled” from “Disintegration”, one of Smith’s favorite Cure songs – then drums, guitars and various sound effects enter. The song was born from the cyclical conflicts and reconciliations that Smith says he had with a person, wondering if this is what men are made of, continuous personal wars. Just over 4 minutes, one of the shortest songs on the album.


“Drone: Nodrone”

A distorted bass, the drums; the “drone” referred to in the title is the one spotted above the singer’s house: the song, explains Smith, was born from the frustration generated by the intrusive nature and continuous surveillance of the contemporary world. This is why it is the angriest song on the album, even musically, punctuated by a piercing electric guitar that chases Smith’s voice for the entire song, 4 and a half minutes.


“I can never say goodbye”

The piano is preceded by the sound of a storm, then the drums forcefully enter, for another long 2 minute intro. The song is the mourning for the death of Robert Smith’s brother: the music was written immediately after his death while the words, he says, arrived only after some time and are the story of their last evening together: “Something wicked this way comes/To steal away my brother’s life/I could never say goodbye”. Smith says that singing this song live helped him overcome his grief: in videos of the performances he is often emotional.


“All I ever Am”

Drums and synths, then guitars, with a relatively short intro, 1 and a half minutes. Smith defines it as a song about self-acceptance, about realizing that you are a sum of multitudes, of ghosts, dreams, memories and hopes that come to define the present self.


“Endsong”

Another familiar-sounding intro of drums, synths and guitars: the record ends as it began, with a sister song to “Alone”. Here too there is a long instrumental intro that almost lasts 6 minutes, and the theme of disorientation, of feeling lost and of growing old in an increasingly complex and broken world: “And I’m outside in the dark/ Staring at the blood red moon/ Remembering the hopes and dreams I had/All I had to do/And wondering what became of that boy/And the world he called his own/And I’m outside in the dark/Wondering how I got so old”.

On the tour it closed the band’s main set, on the album it is a 10-minute masterpiece, which ends with Smith repeating “Left alone with nothing at the end of every song/Left alone with nothing” on a distorted guitar and insistent drums.
 
Some very interesting points:

- ICNBTS and Step Into The Light have been recorded
- SOALW was originally 13 songs long
- Second album is pretty much finished and good to go
- They’ve recorded a song back from the Wish sessions, among other sessions over the years

“Five of them have been written since 2017. But one's 2010, one is 2011 and one's about 2013 or '14. There's so many songs to choose from. We recorded 25, 26 songs, I think, in 2019. We recorded three albums in 2019! I've been trying to get three albums completed because my idea was that after waiting this long, let's just throw out Cure albums every few months! With hindsight, you think, 'Really?" But it will work out this time because having finished this one, the second one is virtually finished as well. The third one is a bit more difficult because... Yeah, if we get that far.”


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Read it all here: https://www.reddit.com/r/TheCure/s/wfECnng0Mg
 
Edit: just realised a link to Reddit has this article already via @Ryan, but here's my digital edition converted to images. As there was no Morrissey content in the issue - thought people would appreciate this:
Songs Of A Lost World reviewed = 9/10

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Regards,
FWD.
 
Key takeaways from new 1-hour 40 minute interview posted today:


Another Happy Birthday will be on the next album, along with It Can Never Be The Same (which RS confirmed was originally titled Christmas Without You)

A Fragile Thing was originally called “Kill The Sun”

All I Ever Am deals with the idea of the persistence of self through time, and was the longest song for him to “get right,” and compared it to the song Lost from the self-titled album

The album originally ended with a song after Endsong called “Bodiam Sky”, which was just RS on an acoustic guitar, giving an answer to the questions asked in Endsong, like a glimmer of light at the end. He took it off at the last minute when the album was made less doom and gloom with the inclusion of Warsong and Drone:Nodrone. He said they would probably re-record it for the next album. He said some of the lyrics from it are printed on the album. Need confirmation of the actual title.

Asked his favourite Cure songs from each album

Three Imaginary Boys

At Night

Faith (the song he was most proud of writing)

Cold

The Top

Sinking

If Only Tonight We Could Sleep

Untitled (one of his favourite Cure songs in general)

To Wish Impossible Things (actually said he wonders why they barely play that one live)

Want (then changed it to Treasure and mentioned the poem it was inspired by)

The Last Day of Summer

Before Three (said the self titled is his least favourite album)

The Hungry Ghost
 
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