Classic Rock

Idles

Joy As An Act Of Resistance PARTISAN

- Briony edwards

Following their 2017 debut album Brutalism, Idles found themselves in a tricky, if familiar, position: as interest in the band mounted, they struggled with the pressures of coming up with an anticipate­d second album. Then tragedy engulfed vocalist Joe Talbot when he lost his baby daughter. His concerns about the band were thrown into sharp perspectiv­e.

That second album is an honest, potent response to trauma – but one which, perhaps surprising­ly, unearths hope in the depths of its grief. Lead-off single Danny Nedelko is a celebratio­n of the support that can be found within communitie­s, which owes a debt to Sham 69 with its raucous football chant chorus. Never Fight A Man With A Perm, Gram Rock and Samaritans each challenge suffocatin­g stereotype­s of modern masculinit­y, set to a soundtrack of taught, infectious post-punk.

Then there’s June. While Talbot’s daughter permeates the record, this is where her loss is addressed directly. ‘Dreams can be so cruel sometimes/I dreamt I kissed your crying eyes’ comes the song’s opening couplet, before its sombre refrain ‘Baby shoes, for sale, never worn’.

This album is a heart-breaking but jubilant exploratio­n of joy, honesty, fragility and expression as our most powerful means of human resistance.

 ??  ?? Truth, loss and hope on Bristol post-punks’ second.
Truth, loss and hope on Bristol post-punks’ second.

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