Like a lot of people who live deep in their own brains, Water From Your Eyes’ Nate Amos and Rachel Brown use humor as a smokescreen. “There’s nothing about that song that isn’t funny to me,” Amos once said of “Barley,” a mathematical-philosophical puzzle masquerading as a dance-punk rave-up, and a highlight of their 2023 Matador debut, Everyone’s Crushed. “‘Remember Not My Name’ is the funniest song on the album to me,” Brown said of another Everyone’s Crushed standout, a pathos-soaked slow jam about the vulnerability of infatuation. And here’s that word again: “I was very anti-guitar for a long time, and then I realised that guitar is actually really funny,” Amos recently said of the stylistic turn the band takes on its thrilling new album, It’s a Beautiful Place. “Like, nothing’s funnier than a guitar solo.”
A two-person mind meld fueled by inside jokes and existential awe, Water From Your Eyes are unreliable narrators who can be counted on to perplex, enthrall, and occasionally shred. Their music is antic and turbulent in equal measure, marked by strange time signatures, stylistic pileups, and conflicted emotions hidden behind dazed grins. They are sufficiently schooled in the pop canon to confidently reshape it, balancing easy listening and serialism, industrial dance and microtonal composition, while invoking acts like Cake, Sting, and Red Hot Chili Peppers as reference points for their idiosyncratic, omnivorous brand of art pop—theoretically defensible comparisons, but also patently absurd.
To call It’s a Beautiful Place merely “funny” would be like calling Fargo a workplace comedy about a used-car salesman, or Being John Malkovich a mistaken-identity rom com. And while the guitar forms the backbone of Water From Your Eyes’ new album, to call it their “guitar record” would miss the astonishing range they wring from the instrument: pummeling post-hardcore, shoegaze, ’90s alt-rock, ’80s jangle, indie dance, prog, and even some ramshackle country rock that sounds not unlike, well, the Chili Peppers cosplaying as a podunk bar band—all held together with calming atmospheric sketches, eye-wateringly complex drum programming, and some of the most serenely searching vocals that Brown has brought to the project yet. Not to mention some blistering guitar solos.
After the relative darkness of 2023’s Everyone’s Crushed, an album steeped in pandemic angst, political turmoil, and Amos’ rocky efforts to get sober, the band suggested that the follow-up would be more “hopeful.” On the surface, It’s a Beautiful Place frequently is more upbeat and certainly more energized: Following a brief ambient teaser, the album lurches into action with “Life Signs,” the duo’s most intense song to date. Jagged power chords trade off with spidery riffs, all in a destabilizing 5/4 time signature that recalls hardcore deconstructionists Shudder to Think or math rockers Don Caballero. “Go to hell/Take the train/Generations/Learned impatience,” intones Brown, channeling rap-rock’s drawn-out cadences into a sleepwalker’s murmur before summoning Stereolab’s coolly angelic tones in the luminous, enigmatic chorus: “What’s on the record/Life in a small town/Fifth and a first sound.” Your guess is as good as mine, but the feel of their singing, combined with Amos’ buoyant jazz harmonies, is life-affirming, soul-cleansing.