Tired of writing pop dystopias, the art-rockers approached their new album by ‘abandoning the human brain’ and feeding Confucius and Beowulf into a bot they named Kevin

A common criticism of pop music today is that it is too dominated by technology. Vocals are smoothed into perfect pitch and drums or synths come from presets, the end result being that too many songs sound almost the same. They are lacking humanity, those critics say – literally brainless.

For Raw Data Feel, their superb new album, Everything Everything have gone further still, “abandoning the human brain”, says singer Jonathan Higgs, in favour of artificial intelligence. “Not until we were about halfway through,” he elaborates over a cuppa in a Manchester bar. “But, yeah, that’s exactly what we did.”

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Coronavirus live news: India death toll passes 300,000; Taiwan criticises WHO’s ‘indifference’ after meeting snub

Taiwan excluded from WHO Covid-19 meeting; India reports 4,454 deaths in 24…

Algeria says its coastguard fired warning shots before killing jetski riders

Defence ministry releases its version of events five days after two dual…

‘Really basic stuff’: Crufts showcases ‘good citizens’ scheme as dog attacks rise

Kennel Club shows owners how to socialise and approach dogs, after increase…

The Guardian view on Afghanistan’s suffering: the war against women | Editorial

Families are in desperate straits, the security situation is worsening – but…