Daily Press

Frontman builds world all about love in Glass Animals album

- By Mark Kennedy

Glass Animals’ latest album was born thanks to a massive storm, a house on a cliff and an existentia­l crisis. What emerged from that? A 10-track collection exploring love.

The indie-pop band’s frontman, songwriter and producer Dave Bayley found himself in an Airbnb house high on stilts below Mulholland Drive in Los Angeles, alone, sick with fever and wondering about Glass Animals’ place in the universe.

Then came a powerful storm: Trees tumbling down the hill, roads flooded and his rented house perched precarious­ly. “My existentia­l crisis went to the next level,”

Bayley says, laughing.

But in the dazed calm that followed, Bayley saw people emerge from the storm and embrace — families, couples, friends, neighbors. “I felt like I was sitting in space in this house, looking down on the whole city.” A musical concept was born.

A few furious weeks of writing produced the 10-track “I Love You So (Expletive) Much,” a follow-up to their third album, 2020’s “Dreamland,” which sold over 12 million copies. The new collection comes out July 19 via Republic Records.

There are songs about longing and ones about past relationsh­ips. One compares love to being hogtied and thrown into the trunk of a Corolla. “Each try to kind of touch on a different side of love,” Bayley says. “I love trying to build a whole world.”

The anthemic “Creatures in Heaven” is the first single, a memory of a tender, intimate moment. “You held me like my mother made me just for you/ You held me so close that I broke in two.”

The album title — which can be read passionate­ly or exasperate­dly or a million ways in between — comes from the crazy nature of love. “Everything is always chaotic. You just have to kind of embrace it for what it is and love it,” Bayley says. “That is what pulled me out of that dark spot.”

“Show Pony,” the first song, is a table of contents for the album, a tune about a complex, up-and-down relationsh­ip that Bayley grew up witnessing (“All those times he did what he pleased/ Boy, those scars must really run deep”).

Several songs lean on space imagery — especially “A Tear in Space (Airlock)” — or the need to flee — “On the Run” — or the dangerous push-pull of adoration in “Wonderful Nothing.” There are some gorgeous lines, like, “I think we’re formed/ from old Lego/ in a bedside drawer/ where the stray things go.”

Bayley has become a more confession­al writer with each passing Glass Animals’ album. On “How to Be a Human Being,” he wrote each song from the perspectiv­e of someone else. The last tune, “Agnes,” was about a friend of the band who died by suicide.

He pushed that envelope on the next album with the single “Heat Waves,” a hypnotic, hazy tune that honors a departed friend whose birthday brings grief each passing June. It hit No. 1 on Billboard’s 2022 yearend Hot 100 Songs chart.

Glass Animals — which also includes Drew MacFarlane on guitar and keys, Edmund Irwin-Singer on bass and keys, and drummer Joe Seaward — will hit the road starting Aug. 7 to support the new album with a tour across the U.S. before heading to Europe.

The band will mix it up, varying each show’s set list depending on the vibe. Some band’s program everything they do live, but not Glass Animals, who like to react to the crowd, even swapping out songs moments before going on.

“I actually came from a DJ background. I started deejaying clubs in London when I was really young,” Bayley says. “Really good DJs react to the feeling in the room, and you pick up the tempo slowly sometimes. Sometimes you start with the fast stuff, you bring it down and then up again.”

In line with Glass Animals’ desire to connect with listeners, Bayley says he’d be happy if fans sent them their set lists. “I’d be very happy to play with what people want. That’s what I feel our job is. I want to make people happy.”

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