February 18 street date. Arguably one of the biggest guitar bands in the UK, it's been well over a decade since White Lies' breakthrough single "Death" introduced a group for whom the fragility of human existence has been a constant touchstone. Now in his 30s, chief lyricist Charles Cave's outlook on the great unknown has evolved. The followup to 2019's "Five, As I Try Not To Fall Apart" is their most expansive record to date, taking in explosive rock, electro-pop bangers, prog-inspired invention, funk-tinged grooves and some of their most indelible hooks yet. "We'll probably never make an album in the way we made this one again," says Cave. Recorded over two studio sessions, White Lies tested their resolve to get there, but they didn't fall apart. They have emerged with their most vital collection of songs in years.
February 18 street date. Arguably one of the biggest guitar bands in the UK, it's been well over a decade since White Lies' breakthrough single "Death" introduced a group for whom the fragility of human existence has been a constant touchstone. Now in his 30s, chief lyricist Charles Cave's outlook on the great unknown has evolved. The followup to 2019's "Five, As I Try Not To Fall Apart" is their most expansive record to date, taking in explosive rock, electro-pop bangers, prog-inspired invention, funk-tinged grooves and some of their most indelible hooks yet. "We'll probably never make an album in the way we made this one again," says Cave. Recorded over two studio sessions, White Lies tested their resolve to get there, but they didn't fall apart. They have emerged with their most vital collection of songs in years.
February 18 street date. Arguably one of the biggest guitar bands in the UK, it's been well over a decade since White Lies' breakthrough single "Death" introduced a group for whom the fragility of human existence has been a constant touchstone. Now in his 30s, chief lyricist Charles Cave's outlook on the great unknown has evolved. The followup to 2019's "Five, As I Try Not To Fall Apart" is their most expansive record to date, taking in explosive rock, electro-pop bangers, prog-inspired invention, funk-tinged grooves and some of their most indelible hooks yet. "We'll probably never make an album in the way we made this one again," says Cave. Recorded over two studio sessions, White Lies tested their resolve to get there, but they didn't fall apart. They have emerged with their most vital collection of songs in years.