Official press release:
Failure release The Heart is A Monster, the Los Angeles-based trio’s highly anticipated follow-up to 1996’s Fantastic Planet, on June 30 via INgrooves Music Group’s artist services division, INresidence.
Ken Andrews, who mixed the 18-song collection with the band acting as producers, said:
“Trying to follow up Fantastic Planet was a bit daunting. We’ve pushed the bar upward again, but at the same time, we’ve kept the signature sound of the band intact.”
Greg Edwards explains:
“Thematically we’ve moved from the outer space of Fantastic Planet to inner space. From the dislocation of one’s identity to the complete erasing of it by sleep and dreams. I think we’ve used instrumentation in the service of mood and emotion to an even greater degree than on our previous records.”
Bryan Mead, INgrooves Senior Vice President of INresidence, said about the new partnership:
“Failure is that rare band who define a sound that transcends space and time. They are truly iconic and their time is now. Listen.”
The band returned from a 17-year hiatus in early 2014 with a single Los Angeles date planned. The show sold out in seconds, which led to a North American tour, including a run of dates with Tool, and eventually back to the studio. In a recent interview with Noisey, Andrews admits by the time the band announced their first live outing, he, Edwards and Kellii Scott were already working on new music, saying:
“One thing that Greg and I agreed on very early on, is that we did not want to reform for just one or two nostalgia tours. We wanted to come back as a full functioning musical force and creatively pick up where we left off with Fantastic Planet. That meant we needed to start experimenting in the studio first, which we did in late 2013. After a few months, we came to the conclusion that we were having a good time and that we liked the results, and that we thought the results were definitely Failure. We’ve been chipping away at a new album this whole time.”
In that same article, Andrews and Edwards explain that their approach to writing and recording Fantastic Planet and The Heart is A Monster have been similar, saying:
“The songs on Fantastic Planet appear more or less in the order that we wrote them… when, we do a song now, we write it and record it soup-to-nuts without moving to another song… It takes longer, but it makes more sense for us artistically to explore a song completely before you move on.”
Failure’s SXSW performance, which was the trio’s first live outing since wrapping production on The Heart is A Monster, included the new song “Hot Traveler”, which Entertainment Weekly said “had every bit the sonic thickness, rhythmic thump, and melodic bite as favorites like ‘Another Space Song’ and ‘Heliotropic’.”
The band recently announced the vinyl reissue of Fantastic Planet, available exclusively via PledgeMusic.