FEATURE: Second Spin: Muse – Simulation Theory

FEATURE:

 

 

Second Spin

 

Muse – Simulation Theory

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MUSE released…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Jeff Forney

the amazing Will of the People last year. They are a tremendous and legendary band, but I think that their music can divide people. Maybe some feel they peaked around 2006’s Black Holes and Revelations, but the Devon band have been producing excellent albums since. One that is underrated and warrants more love is 2018’s Simulation Theory. Unlike some of their more Rock-based albums, their eighth took in influences from Science Fiction and 1980s pop culture, with a much greater use of synthesisers. I think that the album deserved much bigger acclaim from critics. That said, Simulation Theory got to number one in the U.K. and twelve in the U.S. I will get to a couple of the more positive reviews for this excellent Muse album. I really love Simulation Theory, so I wanted to shed positive light on it. Before coming to some reviews, the BBC spoke with the band’s lead, Matt Bellamy, in December 2018 ahead of live shows to promote Simulation Theory:

This album riffs on the sounds of the 80s. What led you down that path?

When I started making the album, I purchased a virtual reality headset and gaming system. I've never really been much of a gamer - but it blew me away, the feeling of transportation into an alternate world. I found that really fascinating. That correlated with my interest in the TV series Black Mirror and my love of sci-fi - and so it triggered memories of my childhood in the 80s.

What sort of things?

When I was eight or nine, I watched a few films that perhaps I shouldn't have watched at that age - Aliens or The Thing or Blade Runner. And those films had a bigger impact on me than I realised. So the first song on the album, Algorithm, is my invented sound track to a sci-fi film from the 80s.

Then I also got interested in my memories of family films such as Star Wars and Back To The Future and Teen Wolf and I thought to myself, "On the videos for this album, why not create our own little virtual world, where we can go back and visit some of our favourite things from our early childhood?" So it's all linked together.

You can't have been expecting that when you bought a games console...

I think simulated reality is something that'll become more common in the coming decade. We'll soon be able to live in these online gaming surroundings.

The other thing that fascinated me while I was playing these computer games was that I could talk to random strangers in Russia, Korea or somewhere in America. There was a whole social aspect - and I think that really influenced the sound of the album and gave it the mixture of nostalgia and that futuristic feel.

I immediately thought of Back To The Future when I listened to the album. It was like you'd taken Doc Brown's DeLorean and gone back to the 80s. Especially on a song like Propaganda where it sounds like you're trying to connect to the soul of Prince.

Yeah, basically! And this isn't the first time. We did that on Supermassive Black Hole, too.

But the thing is, I think nostalgia not the same as it used to be. That's a strange thing to say. But when we were in the 90s and 2000s, looking back wasn't something I did very often. But I feel in this decade, nostalgia gives you this funny feeling - you can bring something back but also make it feel like it's for the future. So the feeling is like, "Oh, actually this thing isn't dead. I'm bringing it back to life".

The album seems a lot more optimistic than the dystopian nihilism of Drones and Second Law. Have you changed your mind?

For sure. It might be age, getting slightly older, but there have always been songs of hope buried in Muse albums. Some of our most popular songs, like Uprising, have a positive message for strength and resistance against oppression. Perhaps its been buried under the dystopian nightmares - but on this album, that positive side is definitely coming through”.

I will get to a couple of the more positive reviews for Simulation Theory. LoudWire where Impressed by the new sonic direction and the way the album captures the listeners’ imaginations. Compared to the colder and more political Drones (2015), Simulation Theory is definitely brighter and broader. It is an album that I would recommend everyone to listen to:

This is not a test. We encourage you to find a pair of headphones and escape into Muse's world of high stakes heaviness known as their Simulation Theory album. The trio of Matt Bellamy, Chris Wolstenholme and Dominic Howard have continually pushed boundaries, becoming more and more theatric with each album and Simulation Theory continues that trend, taking listeners into a world that feels both nostalgic and futuristic at the same time.

For their latest effort, Muse employed a different release strategy, initially choosing to go the "singles" route, offering the first taste of new music -- the ominously heavy and slinking rocker "Dig Down" -- way back in May 2017. The better part of a year passed before "Thought Contagion" followed, with the dynamic rocker challenging listeners not to get caught up in the party line that often comes with news reporting. While both tracks were issued initially as stand alone singles, they eventually became the building blocks for a new album.

And build is exactly what Muse did, employing all sorts of musical gadgetry to capture the imagination of listeners while thematically attempting to hold on to humanity in an increasingly technologic world. It feels like a bit of a musical playground at times, with bluesy slide guitars, scratching, church organs, pianos, robotic vocals and more joining the kitchen sink in the mix, but the guitars, synths and drums still power most of what the band does and does well.

The album opening "Algorithm" is not what you might consider a traditional song structure, starting with an instrumental bit that employs tension-building synths and strings and a bit of classical piano that Bellamy once likened to "'80s synth computer game music." A minute and a half passes before the opening vocal, but the lyrics are worth waiting for, setting a very visual tone for what's to come -- a war with a creator as humans are viewed as more of a simulation. That seemingly falls in line with the videos for "Dig Down" and "Thought Contagion," which teased a virtual world that has played out as more videos have been released from the album.

Bellamy and the band have created an album that flows together musically and creatively, while delivering songs feel like they come with high stakes. "Break me out / break me out / Let me flee / Break me out / break me out / set me free," begs Bellamy with impassioned intent, while later showing some insane falsetto on "The Dark Side."  "Life is a broken simulation, I'm unable to feel / I'm searching for something that's real / I am always seeking to see what's behind the veil," later offers the singer in "Blockades," showcasing a bit of what lies at stake in the driving, "Knights of Cydonia"-esque rocker. Meanwhile, the album closer, "The Void," finds the band at one of their most defiant moments, with Bellamy proclaiming, "They'll say, no one can see us / That we're estranged and all alone / They believe nothing can reach us / And pull us out of the boundless gloom / They're wrong / They're wrong / They're wrong."

While the lyrics may paint a picture of isolationist angst, the music drives home the point. Howard shines on this highly percussive collection of music, bringing some heavy beats to the more intense tracks on the album, while keeping things swinging and catchy on songs like "Pressure" and "Break It to Me." Other highlights include the radio ready single "Something Human" and the triumphant "Get Up and Fight."

Though Muse have made their name in the alt-rock world, Simulation Theory ups the ante on heaviness and intensity, making it well worth checking out for those who prefer something a little heavier in their sound. Invest in some headphones and enjoy this journey”.

It is a shame that there were some mixed reviews for Muse’s brilliant Simulation Theory. Singles such as Pressure and The Dark Side are some of the band’s best, and it is an album that you come back to time and time again. Pressure is my favourite song from the album. It is such a funky and banging song that stays in the head! In their review, this is what NME had to say about one of the best albums of 2018:

In a bid to escape boredom in the early ‘90s, three awkward teens from Teignmouth, Devon, wearing Ned’s Atomic Dustbin and Nirvana t-shirts, channelled their adolescent angst – and the drive to be as weird as possible – to form what would become the institution and stadium powerhouse that is Muse.

In those early interim days of artsy grunge experimenting, they went by the names Carnage Mayhem, Gothic Plague and Rocket Baby Dolls. Muse geeks will have experienced a titter of gleeful fandom when the band adopted ‘Rocket Baby Dolls’ as their moniker in the ‘80s pastiche-themed video for recent single ‘Pressure’. Given this self-referential nod, are we to assume that Muse are looking to rekindle their past?

With the artwork of ‘Simulation Theory’ designed by Stranger Things artist Kyle Lambert, and each of the videos so far showing them entering virtual reality recreations of different times and realms, Muse are very much decamping to the imaginations of their childhood bedrooms. Following the blacker-than-black war-mongering dystopia of 2015’s ‘Drones’, they have found an escape from the mire of the here and now.

Opener ‘Algorithm’ carries all the pomp and promise of the best Muse album openers (see ‘Newborn’, ‘Apocalypse Please’ and ‘Take A Bow’), questioning the reality of a world “caged in simulations”, “rendered obsolete” by “evolving algorithms”. It’s the stuff of Charlie Brooker’s Black Mirror nightmares, right down to the Tron-esque ‘80s computer game meets John Carpenter soundscape. The neon escapism flows through the Depeche Mode stomp of ‘The Dark Side’, the George Michael balladry of ‘Something Human’ and eight-bit battlecry of ‘Blockades’.

As is the case with anything Muse do, there are plenty of eyebrow-raising moments on ‘Simulation Theory’. With long-time collaborator Rich Costey on production duties – he’s been leant a hand from pop and hip-hop dons Mike Elizondo (Dr Dre, Eminem), Shellback (Taylor Swift, Britney Spears) and Timbaland (Missy Elliot, Justin Timberlake) – the band have altered the route of their bombast, stepping away from operatic prog. Instead, they indulge their guiltiest pleasures.

There’s the space-age rockabilly delirium of ‘Pressure’, while ‘Propaganda’ is Muse taking the piss to the Nth degree; it’s a vision that sees Matt Bellamy attempting to sound sexy atop EDM machine gun beats and Prince-esque liquid R&B. You’ll be too ashamed to tell anyone just how much you love it. Same goes for ‘Break It To Me’, which is the sound of KoRn covering the Pussycat Dolls. Who knew we needed that? Driven by a sugary hook akin to Ann Lee’s 1999 bubblegum hit ‘Two Times’, ‘Get Up And Fight’ floats with a lightness that Muse aren’t always credited for, before clobbering you with a shameless, monolithic Eurovision-style chorus.

“They’ll say the sun is dying, and the fragile can’t be saved,” Bellamy croons on the shimmering, cinematic closer ‘The Void’, an album highlight, before seeing the light at the end of the tunnel: “But baby, they’re wrong”. Muse have found hope in another world.

Overall, no, ‘Simulation Theory’ is not blessed with the madcap class of their 2001 masterpiece ‘Origin Of Symmetry’, or the pure rock abandon of ‘Drones’. Actually, though, it’s wrong to compare this record to the band’s back catalogue. Yes, this is still Muse, but here they’re trying to be something else – well, everything else. They are avatars in a ridiculous simulation of teenage nerdery, inviting you to steal away from the nightmare, and into an electric dream”.

A brilliant album that did not get the love from critics that it deserved, I think that Simulation Theory should be given another spin. A wonderful album with some of Muse’s best material on, if you have not heard it (or done so in a while), then make sure that you do. From the opening of Algorithm to the end of The Void, it is…

AN epic work.