After a grueling span of three years, the British quartet is back with all sorts of absurdities, frivolities, and color. Yep, they colored the whole album with a variety of lyrical interpretations about struggles on faith, fame, drugs, relationships, and love (a prevalent theme in most of their songs).
Skimming through the different sounds and rhythms of their album, the 1975 had surely stepped up their game. Complexity is surely a forte for lyricist and front man, Matty Healy, as he dazzled the songs with glamorous audacity depicting love and a world where fame equates to your identity. They sure didn’t mind being a bit pretentious and downright weird, as they entitled their album in sixteen words; I like it when you sleep for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it. Healy admitted that it was actually something he said to his ex-girlfriend – something that displays his love for that bit of audacity.
The album kicked off with “The 1975”, a melodious intro to “Love me”, which immediately follows. “Love Me” is the perfect introduction to the groove and funk of the album, a relevant proof of their departure from their former sound. The song is about the mainstream-constructed myth of Healy while he, himself, actually buys into that idea. The lead single adds elements inspired by the late David Bowie, and the groovy guitar riffs reminiscent of the 80s where dancing is almost contagious. The lead single further explains how fame could build up an image of an artist, and how both the audience and the artist subscribe into the idea. The music video seemingly mocks his personal relationships with various famous celebrities and tops it all off with an anthemic, contagious chorus that sings, “Love me if that’s what you wanna do.”
“UGH!”, a challenging song title to pronounce for DJs and VJs, is a song capitalizing on the toxic relationship between a drug-user and the drug, an all too familiar 1975 theme. With a beat as relaxing as the composition of the lyrics, the song takes you to cloud nine.
“A Change of Heart,” pays homage to their earlier works by adding references about their older songs namely: “The City,” and “Robbers”. The song gives you that 80s melodramatic vibe, while also comforting you with its gentleness despite its sad overall theme.

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An evolved 1975
“Well I know when you’re around ‘cause I know the sound, I know the sound of your heart.” It’s as irresistible as its funky overall musicality; and it makes you sing while dancing recklessly to its perfect disco-like beats. What’s even better is, it comes with a guitar riff so fashionably funky it sends your heads bobbing and your bodies moving. Packed with a music video where Healy audaciously plays with criticisms flashed in pink, this record is basically explaining the growth and the constant unpredictability of the 1975.
The record is one big step from the status they acquired in their first album as Healy takes it on another level, constantly trying to evolve. The band is surely a new sound with a different approach on their songs; they are not afraid to be real. With their raucous stage antics and the honesty and transparency in their songs, people from all over the world could surely be swept away by their lyrics. It’s understandably normal for mainstream media to recognize the uniqueness of the band.
The band brings the boldness to break away from the usual genres, speaking about the darker sides of love, self-acceptance, and the drug-addled hell of a city which everyone can relate to. It’s no surprise that the band who wrote “Chocolate” made an album undeniably distinct from their previous one. It’s no surprise that people loved the lyrical capabilities of the band, and their themes revolving around love, and everything that’s bad for you.
The 1975 is that consolation you get when the world is too much, and that drive that fuels you to do all kinds of frivolous acts in the name of youth; for the youth is daring and bold, and the youth finds consolation in songs about recklessness. Love and dependence are remarkable themes and are principally basic when it comes to the subject of originality. However, the 1975 creatively expands these themes to produce a distinct kind of sound. The 1975 is a daring band that turns the harsh realities of life into art