Get To Heaven
The third album by maximalist art-poppers Everything Everything feels like the final part of a trilogy about mankind's desperate self-destruction. Get to Heaven pivots on the violent last resorts of the disenfranchised, and the false prophets who claim to save them.
The Manchester-based outfit challenge political apathy with their poppiest collection of tunes to date.
Co-produced by the band and Stuart Price, who previously produced records for Scissor Sisters, the Killers, and Pet Shop Boys, Everything Everything's third full-length album is a dance-friendly if serious-minded set showcasing their British art rock sensibilities via a through-line of vigor.
Three albums in and folk are eyeing northern quartet Everything Everything closely; surely they must misstep eventually?
'Everything Everything have produced two of the most unbearably catchy songs of the summer'With 'Distant Past' and 'Regret', Everything Everything have produced two of the most unbearably catchy songs of the summer.
Everything Everything is a U.K. band that makes the kind of music now championed by slightly younger groups like alt-J and Adult Jazz. Their first two albums, 2010's Man Alive and 2013's Arc, were experimentally-minded approaches to pop that took pure mel
The quartet’s third album is bursting with ideas and fights shy of easy pigeonholing
From deeply beautiful to spectacularly irritating, Everything Everything’s third album captures the sensory overload of modern life all too well
The indie-pop quartet's third album has everything, from chart-friendly tunes to jittery rap and glitchy electronica, says Helen Brown