Nothing share video for “Catch A Fade”
Single release: out now
Label: Relapse Records
More info: Nothing’s website
WATCH: "Catch A Fade"
https://youtu.be/vC_tHOMB844
The Great Dismal
LISTEN: https://orcd.co/nothing-thegreatdismal
VINYL PRE-ORDER: relapse.com/nothing-the-great-dismal
What the press is saying about The Great Dismal:
“It’s big, it’s breathtaking, and it’ll blow your speakers to smithereens”
Bandcamp
“as pummeling and purifying as a sudden downpour”
The New York Times
“a sweltering expulsion of anxieties and a thoughtful chronicling of our species’ downfall”
Paste Magazine
“...anesthetized grunge that mirrors their relentless gloom. Cut from...UK groups like the Smiths and Cocteau Twins, they’ve distilled their critiques into a distinctly American frustration”
Pitchfork
“majestic and pretty shoegaze”
Stereogum
Today, NOTHING shares a video for "Catch A Fade," taken from their latest album The Great Dismal released in October. The visual, directed by the band's Aaron Heard, is a subtle celebration of the touring and live shows that haven't existed this year, culling some of the band's most memorable moments doing those things over the course of its career. The song is the fifth to receive a visual from the album following, "April Ha Ha," "Famine Asylum," "Say Less" and "Bernie Sanders."
Of the video, Heard says, "'Catch A Fade' is bright on the outside, but a little dark when you look inward. The video is just a compilation of collected footage from our last tour of Asia a few months before COVID hit. We've been sharing these the past year internally to keep each other sane, but they have the same kind of vibe as the track. It’s nice reliving those moments but also it’s heavy considering where we’re at now."
Palermo adds, "Doyle sent me a demo of what would be 'Catch A Fade' while I was demoing in NYC. Kyle and myself took a trip to Michigan City, IN to fine tune some of what was close to completion before we went in with Will. This was the first and only track we got to write together from the ground up and it gives you a pretty clear vision of what this particular line up is capable of."
Out via Relapse Records, The Great Dismal was recorded throughout quarantine with producer Will Yip at Pennsylvania’s Studio Four. The acclaimed album, called "an existential commentary on Nothing’s career," by Pitchfork, explores existentialist themes of isolation, extinction, and human behavior in the face of 2020’s vast wasteland.
“The Great Dismal refers to a swamp, a brilliant natural trap where survival is custom fit to its inhabitants,” Palermo states. “The nature of its beautiful, but taxing environment and harsh conditions can’t ever really be shaken or forgotten too easily.”
The album also arrives just prior to the band’s ten year anniversary and follows their live-streamed record release show, The Great Dismal: An Auditory And Ocular Trauma Featuring Nothing and Full Of Hell, which was purposefully formulated as a way to support live music workers worldwide with a proper paid gig while venues and their staff are out of work due to the pandemic.
Watch "Catch A Fade" and listen to The Great Dismal above, see album details below, and stay tuned for more from NOTHING coming soon.
"CATCH A FADE" (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO
The Great Dismal Tracklist:
1. A Fabricated Life
2. Say Less
3. April Ha Ha
4. Catch a Fade
5. Famine Asylum
6. Bernie Sanders
7. In Blueberry Memories
8. Blue Mecca
9. Just a Story
10. Ask The Rust
Closing in on the band’s ten-year mark, NOTHING frontman Domenic Palermo finds himself stringing together songs of misanthropic tales of Philadelphia with a refined and refreshed take on the band’s classic sound.
“The Great Dismal refers to a swamp, a brilliant natural trap where survival is custom fit to its inhabitants,” Palermo states. “The nature of its beautiful, but taxing environment and harsh conditions can’t ever really be shaken or forgotten too easily.”
The ever progressive NOTHING keep true to their chaotic outlook on life, keeping a keen eye as to avoid repetition. With a radical cast of talented contributors such as harpist Mary Lattimore, classical musician Shelley Weiss, and singer/songwriter/producer Alex G., The Great Dismal showcases yet another essential side of the band’s trademark American Post-Shoegaze sound.
"APRIL HA HA" (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)
"FAMINE ASYLUM" (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)
"SAY LESS" (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)