A Fever Dream
The Manchester band are attuned to the absurdity of our times. The hyperactive synthpop of their fourth LP is full of surreal vignettes evoking our increasingly nightmarish world.
Everything Everything's latest is their most conceptual piece to date, and while it might not be as immediate as their last album, its brilliance is revealed with patience.
Manchester’s art-pop clever clogs are thrillingly world-weary on album four, taking on Trump, Brexit, and the end of the world as we know it
After taking on topics like contemporary media, technology, politics, and world events on 2015's Get to Heaven, art-rockers Everything Everything continue in kind, addressing escalating instability on their fourth album, A Fever Dream.
A Fever Dream is perhaps Everything Everything’s most pointedly political album to date.
A guitar band that manage to sound unlike any other reside in Manchester, England: Everything Everything. Two years after their acclaimed th...
'Weary, despondent and dark, the band’s lyrics will certainly chime with the world-weary audience of 2017'Everything Everything have always been a bit of a musical paradox.
U.K. art-pop quartet Everything Everything rightfully gained plenty of attention in 2015 for their bombastic third album Get to Heaven.
In the lead up to their 2015 release ‘Get to Heaven’, Everything Everything began to reflect upon their sophomore effort ‘Arc’.
Our review of "A Fever Dream' by Everything Everything, finds the band going for gold without always sticking the landing.
The Manchester math-rock band’s idea of political pop is a singular, anxiety-pulsing vision. But its inventiveness is welcome
Everything Everything has never played it safe and therein lies their true appeal.