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Ordinary Corrupt Human Love
2018 studio album by Deafheaven From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ordinary Corrupt Human Love is the fourth studio album by American band Deafheaven, released on July 13, 2018 through Anti-.[3] The title of the album was inspired by Graham Greene's 1951 novel The End of the Affair.[4]
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Release and promotion
On January 30, 2018, Deafheaven posted on social media a photo of the members recording the album in a studio, and later confirmed to Pitchfork that they were working on a new album at 25th Street Recording in Oakland, California with longtime collaborator and producer Jack Shirley.[5] They released the lead single of the album, "Honeycomb", on April 18, 2018,[6] and announced the album and its accompanying tour the following day.[4] The second single, "Canary Yellow", was released on June 12.[7] The album was made available for streaming exclusively on NPR on July 5,[8] before being officially released on July 13 on CD, vinyl, digital download and streaming services via Anti-.[9]
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Critical reception
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At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, Ordinary Corrupt Human Love received an average score of 85 based on 26 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[11]
Evan Lilly of The Line of Best Fit wrote, "Ordinary Corrupt Human Love is not perfect, but Deafheaven remain captivating," further stating: "While embracing their black metal roots, Deafheaven tap into their gentler and more experimental side of songwriting by creating one of this year’s richest, most cinematic metal albums."[21] DIY critic Will Richards opined, "Deafheaven finally look comfortable in their many different skins, their opposing worlds gliding together seamlessly," and stated that the album "repositions the band as a genreless powerhouse, and solidifies their status as indie mainstream minglers."[22] TJ Kliebhan of Consequence of Sound said the album has "moving, emotional pieces and sharp performances bolstered by a band clearly stretching out of its comfort zone successfully," continuing: "The album is a refreshing new shade of their sound without abandoning the band's core mechanics."[14] NME's James McMahon wrote, "Deafheaven's brilliance has long been hung upon the pursuit of a truth, like documentarians before they hit the edit suite. These songs are filthy, dank, often devoid of light, but like a weed emerging from a pavement's crack, there's something resembling hope there. A suggestion that maybe there's something more."[17]
Accolades
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Track listing
All tracks are written by George Clarke and Kerry McCoy.
Notes[28]
- "You Without End" features spoken words by Nadia Kury, taken from excerpts of the short story Black and Borax by Tom McElravey.
- "Night People" features additional vocals and production by Chelsea Wolfe and Ben Chisholm.
Personnel
Credits adapted from the liner notes of Ordinary Corrupt Human Love.[28]
Deafheaven
- George Clarke – vocals, piano, keyboards
- Kerry McCoy – guitar
- Daniel Tracy – drums
- Shiv Mehra – guitar
- Chris Johnson – bass
Additional personnel
- Jack Shirley – production, engineering, mixing, mastering
- Nadia Kury – spoken words (track 1)
- Chelsea Wolfe – additional vocals, additional production (track 6)
- Ben Chisholm – additional vocals, additional production (track 6)
- Nick Steinhardt – art direction, design
- Sean Stout – photography
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Charts
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References
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