Wednesday, June 18, 2025
HomeCultureMusicMusic Review - Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds

Music Review – Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds

On first listen I thought all the people raving about Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds’ 16th album needed to get out more.

And way too much emphasis was put on the fact that, some time during the making of the album, Cave’s 15-year-old son Arthur fell to his death.

The resulting record was supposedly “a painful document of love and loss”.

But, while several lyrics were amended by Cave during subsequent recording sessions, most of the album had been written by then. So Skeleton Tree is typical of Cave with its imagery of death, love, blood, loss and uncertainty.

More interesting is how uncomfortably rough around the edges it is. Cave’s lyrics are delivered in spoken word or barely sung, raw, shaky, uncertain.

There is bleak expressionist beauty in the jarring juxtapositions of music —barely a melody, electronic loops — and tension between music and language.

It seems more about coming to terms with change than with grief. An unwelcome, dark awareness, encounters with mundane epiphanies, final reconciliation to an unfeeling universe.

Random lyrics:

All the things we love, we lose.

Let us sit together until the moment comes.

Just breathe.

And let the world turn.

Cause nothing really matters.

“Are you still here?”

 

 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img

Maroubra’s Claudia Hastings dances into her dream role in CATS

Claudia Hastings, who now calls Maroubra home, has had one dream role since she was 10 ...

Forum sparks dialogue on crime, cohesion and response

A public forum held at Alexandria Park Community School on June 9 drew more than 90 residents, many from the Asian migrant community, to address growing concerns about safety in Green Square, Zetland, and surrounding suburbs.

Aunty Millie Ingram recognised in King’s Birthday Honours List

Respected Wiradjuri Elder and long-time Redfern community leader Aunty Millie Ingram has been appointed as a Member (AM) of the Order of Australia in the 2025 King’s Birthday Honours ...

Volunteers’ News – June 2025

Volunteers’ News – June 2025.

Sydney Writers’ Festival 2025 – guest curator Nardi Simpson on storytelling, the body and First Nations voices

At this year’s Sydney Writers’ Festival, guest curator Nardi Simpson didn’t just help design the program, she created a space where relationships, connection, the body and the written word intersect.

Weaving a way to knowledge and healing 

I was born Karleen Green in Brisbane, even though my family lived at Fingal on the Tweed River in Bundjalung country, northern NSW.