FEATURE:
The Best Albums of 2025
The Last Dinner Party – From the Pyre
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MAYBE there is no direct connection…
PHOTO CREDIT: Cal McIntyre
though there have been a few examples this year of artists releasing sophomore albums after celebrated debuts. That idea of a second album curse or difficulty. In these cases, the artists surpassing the debut and expanding on them. Maybe albums truer to them. Wet Leg and moisturizer is one example. Another is the extraordinary second album from The Last Dinner Party, From the Pyre. I guess there is this hype and pressure after a remarkable debut album. Artists deciding if they want to follow the same course or do in a different direction for the follow-up. After their exceptional debut, Prelude to Ecstasy of 2024, The Last Dinner Party put out this follow-up quickly. Picking up on the momentum of their debut and the tour that followed, From the Pyre is going to feature highly in the year-end lists of the best albums. It is one of my favourites from this year. Like I do in these features, I am going to end with a review of the album in question. However, I do want to come to some 2025 interviews with The Last Dinner Party. The London-based band is made up of Abigail Morris, Lizzie Mayland, Emily Roberts, Georgia Davies and Aurora Nishevci. Released on 17th October, and preceded by the single, This Is the Killer Speaking, and The Scythe, From the Pyre won rave reviews from pretty much everyone who heard it. At ten tracks running to forty-two minutes, it is a focused-yet-packed album. In terms of how much they include and how much you get from the album. It was a hard task trying to live up to the standard of an instant classic, Prelude to Ecstasy. However, The Last Dinner Party kept their sound but added new dimensions and elements.
A darker album that is perhaps more ambitious than their debut, From the Pyre is an extraordinary listen! The Standard spoke with The Last Dinner Party in September about their new album. Rather than entering a new era, they were evolving and shedding the skin and misconceptions around their debut – and them as a band. Playing O2 Brixton Academy on 7th and 8th December, the quintet head to Australia in January:
“During their come-up, The Last Dinner Party were consistently accused of being “industry plants” — a term used to describe musicians, usually women, who are purposefully moulded for fame by music industry professionals. This was partially due to their very defined aesthetic. “We wanted to come out fully formed,” explains Morris. “We wanted our debut online and on the live scene to feel really professional and we worked really hard to do that.” But this, she says, “got people’s backs up”. “I don’t think it’s that surprising when we all studied arts and literature,” adds Roberts. “Yeah, like we literally just finished our dissertation on Victorian gothic literature,” says Davies.
And if the haters aren’t calling them industry plants, they’re usually calling them posh. This is because Morris attended the private school Bedales, which charges £55,000 a year for students to attend on a boarding basis. “I understand why people bring it up. It isn’t something to be ignored,” Morris says. “It’s a very relevant fact in terms of part of why we’ve been successful, why I’ve had luck. Though we’re not all from the same background.”
In terms of privilege apologies, Morris’s is one of the best you could hope for. “It’s something I have to acknowledge, and it’s a reflection of the state of the country. People are angry with me,” she adds. But she’s not done. Because The Last Dinner Party aren’t about shutting up and taking it. “I think most people who bring it up aren’t bringing it up in order to have a discussion. They’re doing it to hurt us and discredit us.”
For album two, The Last Dinner Party’s corsets are being unlaced. The big, debauched opulence of Prelude to Ecstasy has been replaced with something darker and more mythical. On the album cover, various iterations of the band’s members pose in a field, poster girls for each song. They’re holding lambs, playing chess, wielding swords and straddling motorbikes. Lyrically, the album speaks less of coming-of-age and more of coming undone — by relationships, grief, world events.
In The Scythe, Morris sings simultaneously about the loss of a relationship and the death of her father to form a rallying, life-affirming eulogy. The instrumentation of the album is equally threatening and theatrical, with cultish, sea-shanty drums and swinging country guitars mere tracks apart. Standout track Rifle is sure to produce some unforgettable live moments thanks to its screaming battle cries, heavy drums and incendiary guitar riffs. Roberts’s prowess on the guitar is the gift that keeps on giving, and this album puts her hard work centre stage.
From the Pyre is more of an evolution than a vibe switch. “We’re really opposed to the idea of having these easily definable and marketable eras,” says Morris. “I don’t think that’s conducive to good art.” Her words bring to mind Taylor Swift’s many “eras” and the resulting $2 billion round-up tour, with the American singer-songwriter now inextricably linked to the term. Many musicians are pressured to follow the same pattern of constant reinvention because, simply put, it sells.
The Last Dinner Party aren’t down for that. “We started this band four years ago,” Morris says. “Now we’re all in our mid to late twenties, and that’s when you go through so much change. Naturally, our styles have evolved, and we don’t want to wear the same things we were wearing three years ago. That’s not because we need to draw a line and be like, ‘That was old The Last Dinner Party, this is new.’ It’s not like that. It’s a natural evolution. So there’ll still be some corsets,” she laughs”.
Abigail Morris and Emily Roberts spoke with NME last month following the release of their anticipated second album. They discussed the album life on the road, and the downsides (or realities) of speaking out – and the importance of doing so. If you can see The Last Dinner Party play then please do so as they are a celebrated and scintillating live act:
“She agrees with the observation that there’s been a shift in how artists speak out — one that would have felt taboo not long ago. “I think it has really changed in the last few years”, she considers. “As an artist today, even if your writing isn’t on the nose politically, you can’t help but be a part of the world. You’re still absorbing what’s going on and being a channel for it. With the world the way it is right now, it didn’t make sense for us not to say anything. We’re talking about this in our normal lives, with each other and our friends. Trying to figure out the best way to use our vote in elections, how to do things on the ground, where to donate our money… It makes sense, then, that we also talk about it publicly.”
“A learning curve for us has been figuring out whose opinions to really care about” – Abigail Morris
Alongside the new album, the band have announced headline tours across the UK, Europe and North America that will stretch into 2026. It’s a familiar path – one they followed with their debut album until touring reached a breaking point last year, forcing them to cancel a run of UK and European shows due to “emotional, mental and physical burnout”.
“It was such a hard decision to have to make as we didn’t want to let anyone down,” Roberts reflects now. “But we had to prioritise our health. It’s really hard as a new artist to know your limits until you reach them.”
“At the beginning, we felt like we had to say yes to literally everything that came our way,” she continues. “Obviously, it was good and got us to where we are, but there’s only so much you can do without harming yourself in some way – whether that’s getting overwhelmed, depressed or overworked. We know our limits better now, and because of that, hope we won’t have to cancel anything again. It’s been good seeing other artists like Chappell [Roan] do the same thing as well.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Rachell Smith
The realities of touring life are woven into the album, too. Especially, as Morris notes, the “Venn diagram of ‘being a woman’ and ‘being an artist’ and within it, the specific fraught experience of being a ‘touring female musician’”.
On ‘Agnus Dei’, the band sing in chorus: “All I can give you is your name in lights forever / And ain’t that so much better than a ring on my finger?” It’s a striking image – the tradeoff between immortalising your lover in song but not being able to give them a stable home life with you. Themes of motherhood and femininity also echo through the record, especially on ‘Woman Is A Tree’ and ‘I Hold Your Anger’.
“We’re in our late twenties, a time when your friendship groups start talking about getting engaged and whether or not to start a family,” Morris shares. “It’s interesting to navigate that as a female artist. Like, what do you choose? The road, the album, the marriage, the baby? All of it? None of it? What sacrifices do you have to make? Can you take control of your artistry and your body?”
Speaking to other female artists about this complex subject is comforting, she adds. “Especially with people like Florence Welch, who I really trust. It’s so good to talk about it, even if no one really has ‘the answer’”.
Before getting to a review of From the Pyre, there is one more interview I want to spotlight. DORK spoke with this incredible band. From the Pyre is them digging “deeper into grief, glamour, fury and friendship”. As DORK note, rather than this being a reinvention, it is the band turned “all the way up”. It is going to be really compelling seeing how The Last Dinner Party build and what they offer next. In the meantime, they will be busy touring and, let’s hope, taking a bit of a break:
“There were times when creating ‘From The Pyre’ that Abi felt like she was simply “banging on about some bullshit drama” and was worried honest songs about the life of a writer were “very self-obsessed”. The reaction to ‘The Scythe’ has calmed those worries. “It’s nice when you write something personal that ends up being far bigger than your own life. We can all think of songs that have found us and then made us feel seen in a way that’s so profound and shocking. To know we’ve written a song that makes other people feel like that is incredibly humbling.”
‘From The Pyre’ was a lot more collaborative than ‘Prelude’, with the band trusting their chemistry and camaraderie even more. Emily wrote about love, betrayal and self-worth on the snotty ‘Second Best’. “I hope that the song captures the pain, anger and despair I felt, but most importantly the defiance and satisfaction I now have in being able to immortalise this person in a song,” she explains.
Elsewhere, ‘Hold Your Anger’ was written by Aurora. Originally a stripped-back slice of piano-driven anxiety, it grew into something that’s part brooding, Nick Cave melancholy, part rock’n’roll swagger. It’s an evolved take on the generational trauma that drove ‘The Feminine Urge’. “It’s about contending with being in your mid-to-late-20s. Asking what it would be like to be a mother, whether it’s something you want, whether you’d be any good at it, and then looking at your own mother and seeing them as their own person,” explains Georgia. “I think it’s absolutely brilliant.”
The anthology that is ‘From The Pyre’ closes with the rumbling ‘Inferno’, which works through The Last Dinner Party’s experiences of being in a band. “It’s us talking about how amazing but horrific it can be to be in the public eye,” says Georgia. “It’s about the internal chaos,” adds Abi, who always visualises the hectic, frenzied breakdown as two burning spirals going in opposite directions. “The fire is only getting bigger, and you can pick which way you want to go but either way, it’s leading somewhere else,” she says, confident the band are never going to stand still. “It’s optimistic and open-ended – it sums up where we’ve been and where we’re going.”
Despite that cheery ending, the biggest difference between ‘Prelude’ and ‘From The Pyre’ is a sense of looming darkness that cuts into the giddy, free-spirited joy. “It’s a record that’s a product of the time in which it was written,” explains Georgia. “The world feels very dark, and that permeates everything you do. It would be bizarre if your art wasn’t influenced by that.”
You’ve never been able to accuse The Last Dinner Party of being uncertain or shy, but ‘From The Pyre’ is a fearlessly confident record from a band who have really embraced every corner of their own mythos and still managed to push things forward. Being part of a cohort of other established guitar bands like Wet Leg and Wolf Alice has helped (“It’s nice to see yourself in them,” offers Georgia), but a lot of it is down to the community they’ve found in each other and from their fanbase.
“Just seeing the way our music has resonated with people, be that online or at a show, is a huge deal,” says Abi. All five members of the band have been told how The Last Dinner Party have inspired others to pick up an instrument, toy with self-expression and feel comfortable in their own skin. “When you feel like you’ve made a positive impact on someone’s life, that’s pretty amazing,” she continues. “It makes you feel hopeful and that you’re doing something that’s causing net good in the world, which is a really good vocation.”
Is being in The Last Dinner Party still as fun as when they first got together and dreamed of selling out The George Tavern, though? Once again, they answer in unison. “Yes, and more”.
I am finishing with a review of From the Pyre from Rolling Stone UK. Awarding it a much-deserved five stars, they shared their opinions of an album that I think will be in most critics’ top ten. If you have not heard this amazing album then do so now. I think that it is one of the best albums of the decade, rather than just this year. The Last Dinner Party are one of our best bands:
“‘Here comes the apocalypse and I can’t get enough of it,” sings The Last Dinner Party’s Abigail Morris over the glorious guitars and keys which underpin the opening track to their second album and reflect the darker edge that’s all too present throughout.
Their 2024 debut Prelude to Ecstasy was a game-changer of a record, one which combined baroque pop with bigger rock sensibilities to deliver a sound that was truly their own. It achieved the UK’s biggest sales in nine years for a debut album in its first week, while sold-out tours and performances at the BRITs cemented the five-piece’s position as one of the UK’s boldest and brightest new bands.
But on From the Pyre, the band sounds even more defined and blessed with the ability to make their point with searing clarity. The album’s first song ‘Agnus Dei’ is a piercing dissection of lovers past and – as Morris told Rolling Stone UK for the band’s cover earlier this year – even interpolates a melody from a song by someone she previously found herself in a situation-ship with, though she reckons it would be impossible to work out who they are.
That’s in part down to the sonic identity at play here, which means that the record never stays in one avenue and sounds all the better for it. That opening track might deliver the baroque grandiosity you’d expect, but ‘This Is the Killer Speaking’ offers their first ever country/pop moment and is enriched by one of the biggest choruses they’ve ever done.
It’s a similar story on ‘Rifle’, a sludgy, stoner rock-flecked song which feels like a companion piece to ‘My Lady of Mercy’ from their debut and sits somewhere between Queens of the Stone Age and Black Sabbath’s ‘War Pigs’. As Morris sings of “boots and rifles stained with red”, it doesn’t take a genius to see that there’s a very modern parallel to be drawn.
At times, these euphoric moments are simultaneously capable of breaking your heart. That’s certainly true on ‘The Scythe’, a slow-burning rock epic which began life as a break-up song before Morris slowly realised that she had written a thorough rumination on the death of her father. “Don’t cry, we’re bound together / Each life runs its course,” she sings with razor-sharp precision on the song’s euphoric chorus. The result is one of the best rock songs about death and facing mortality in recent memory.
All of these tracks reflect the more sombre themes inherent within the album and indeed its title – the large pile of wood used to burn bodies in traditional funeral ceremonies. It’s ironic, however, that ruminations on death and darkness have allowed this band to sound more alive than ever. The five-piece previously told Rolling Stone UK how producer James Ford – shortly before pulling out of this project due to illness – told them to “have fun, be bold and make a classic record”. All considered, they’ve heeded that advice to the max. It would be a tough ask for them to top their sublime debut, but it feels like they might just have managed it. From the Pyre should cement their place in the biggest of leagues”.
I have a few more albums to cover I think before I wrap this series up. Documenting and expanding on album that are the best of this year. My favourite of this year. One listen of From the Pyre, and it will stay in your mind. This is a stunning album that is…
HARD to forget.
