Death Magic
Death Magic is the third studio album by American noise rock band Health. It was released by Loma Vista Recordings on August 7, 2015, six years after the band's previous album, Get Color.[1]Background
Development
Following the release of their second album Get Color in 2009, which solidified HEALTH's reputation in the noise rock scene with its chaotic, high-energy sound, the band began exploring a more refined and accessible aesthetic. This evolution was significantly shaped by their work on the soundtrack for the video game Max Payne 3 in 2012, where they incorporated baritone guitars, unconventional pedal effects, and ambient textures that deviated from their earlier "sunny, busy noise rock" style toward something more melancholic and hazy. The scoring project forced compositional growth, introducing electronic elements and production techniques that emphasized suspense and continuity across extended pieces, ultimately influencing HEALTH's desire for a broader, electronic-infused sound on their next full-length release.[2][3] Initial songwriting for Death Magic took place during informal sessions in 2013 and 2014, during which the band experimented with integrating their industrial noise roots—characterized by abrasive synths and distorted rhythms—into more structured pop frameworks, such as verse-chorus progressions and repeatable hooks. Tracks like "Stonefist," developed in this period, exemplified this blend, drawing from anti-love themes and even pop influences like Lady Gaga, while retaining punchy, cartoonish effects amid danceable noise elements. These sessions marked a deliberate pivot toward cohesion and mood over pure experimentation, allowing HEALTH to channel the ambient refinement gained from game scoring into song forms that balanced aggression with melody.[4][5] To achieve a polished, modern rock aesthetic, HEALTH decided to bring in external producers for the first time, collaborating with Andrew Dawson—known for his work with Kanye West on albums like Yeezus—The Haxan Cloak, a British electronic artist affiliated with Björk, and Lars Stalfors, a veteran engineer from projects with The Mars Volta. This choice stemmed from the band's aim to elevate their production beyond DIY noise, with Dawson handling mixing for a cleaner edge, The Haxan Cloak contributing atmospheric electronic layers, and Stalfors co-producing tracks to tighten the industrial-pop fusion. The collaborations, initiated during pre-production in 2014, helped refine the album's sound into a genre-defying mix that retained HEALTH's intensity while appealing to wider audiences.[6][7][8]Recording
The recording sessions for Death Magic primarily took place at The Village in Los Angeles, with supplementary work conducted at Paramount Recording Studios. These sessions unfolded over a six-month period from late 2014 to early 2015, marking a deliberate phase of intensive production following years of intermittent development.[6] Producers played pivotal roles in refining the album's sonic palette. Andrew Dawson, acclaimed for his engineering on Kanye West's Yeezus, oversaw mixing duties and co-produced tracks such as "Stonefist" and "Life," emphasizing precise layering to integrate the band's noise-rock roots with polished electronic elements.[6] The Haxan Cloak, a British electronic artist known for collaborations with Björk, contributed dark, atmospheric textures to select tracks like "Victim," infusing brooding synth manipulations that heightened the album's ominous tone.[9] Lars Stalfors, whose prior credits include work with The Mars Volta, handled synth arrangements and co-production across much of the record, including "Dark Enough" and "Salvia," to craft intricate, pulsating backdrops.[10] The production leveraged digital recording techniques—a shift from the analog methods of HEALTH's earlier albums—facilitating extensive overdubs and a dense, multifaceted sound. Specific equipment included modular synthesizers and analog effects processors, which enabled the creation of the album's signature layered textures through experimental signal processing and feedback loops.[6] Challenges arose during overdubs, particularly in balancing abrasive noise elements with accessible melodic hooks, requiring multiple iterations to maintain cohesion without diluting the band's intensity. The process was protracted and emotionally taxing, involving eight separate vocal sessions for frontman Jake Duzsik and overall delays that the band likened to inducing PTSD-like stress from repeated revisions and producer alignments.[11]Music and lyrics
Style and composition
Death Magic represents a shift for HEALTH toward an electronic-heavy noise rock sound, incorporating industrial, synth-pop, and goth-pop influences while featuring prominent basslines, distorted guitars, and programmed drums.[12] The album blends overdriven synths with tribal and unpredictable beats, drawing from the band's experience scoring the Max Payne 3 soundtrack to create layered electronic textures.[13] Produced by Andrew Dawson and Lars Stalfors, the record emphasizes pristine, detailed bombast that demands high-fidelity playback, moving away from the raw abrasion of earlier works.[12] Spanning 12 tracks with a total runtime of 39:30, the album's composition balances explosive energy and melodic accessibility. For instance, "Stonefist" employs pulsating synth riffs—generated on computer, reversed, and heavily distorted—paired with aggressive rhythms built from programmed drums, including a live snare, white noise bursts, and glitch effects derived from Pro Tools processing.[14] Other tracks like "New Coke" highlight rafter-shaking low-end bass and mammoth beats, while "Men Today" layers tribal percussion with synth swells for a dynamic build.[12] "Flesh World (UK)" ventures into house-inflected territory with fleet electronic beats and white noise interruptions, underscoring the album's nightclub electronics.[12] Production techniques such as heavy reverb on elements like guitars and percussion contribute to a tinny, echoing atmosphere, evoking a sense of haunted melancholy, while pitch-corrected vocals add a clearer, emotive edge without overpowering the mix.[15] Layered percussion and undertones, informed by the band's video game composition, enhance the "dark magic" immersion, with tracks like "Hurt Yourself" featuring epic, atmospheric builds through stacked synths and repetitive beats.[13] Compared to the abrasive, less structured Get Color (2009), Death Magic is more melodic and pop-accessible, incorporating structured choruses and human vulnerability while retaining an industrial edge.[12]Themes and influences
The album Death Magic explores central themes of mortality, desire, technology's dehumanizing effects, and urban alienation, often drawing from occult imagery and cyberpunk aesthetics to depict modern existential struggles.[16] These motifs manifest in lyrics that confront the fragility of life amid societal pressures, such as in the track "Life," where vocalist Jake Duzsik sings of uncertainty and isolation: "I don’t know what I want... nobody does."[16] The overarching narrative portrays death not as an end but as an omnipresent force intertwined with vitality, amplified by the band's experiences of chronic insomnia and anxiety during its creation.[17] Key lyrics highlight specific critiques within these themes; for instance, "New Coke" satirizes consumerism through its hedonistic, repetitive chorus, evoking the hollow allure of commercial excess in a cyberpunk-tinged world.[16] Similarly, "Men Today" addresses toxic masculinity and emotional isolation with chaotic vocal delivery and abrupt sonic shifts, underscoring interpersonal disconnection in contemporary urban life.[16] These elements reflect the band's personal encounters with LA's cultural decay, including late-night reflections at parties that prompted introspection on aging and relationships, as bassist John Famiglietti described: "You get older and things change... I’d just go, ‘Holy Shit! I have to go home and figure out my life.’"[18] Touring hardships further fueled themes of alienation, with Famiglietti noting the strain on personal connections: "Having a girlfriend when you are on tour really blows."[18] Influences shaping the album's conceptual depth include the electronic melancholy of Depeche Mode and the industrial intensity of Nine Inch Nails, which informed its blend of melodic hooks and abrasive undercurrents, as the band sought a "slick electronic production sound."[18][19] Cinematic sources also played a role, with films like The Shining inspiring occult-tinged visions of mortality through Duzsik's insomnia-fueled dreams, and Enter the Void contributing cyberpunk visuals of urban disorientation.[17] Atmospheric film scores, such as Michael Mann's Heat and Hans Zimmer's The Dark Knight, influenced the album's haunting, transformative mood, evoking psychological tension.[17] The title Death Magic encapsulates these themes as a metaphor for the destructive yet alchemical forces of modern existence, where technology and desire act as both life-affirming and erosive powers, mirroring the band's view of death as an "invisible hand" that heightens aliveness while threatening dehumanization.[16] This concept ties directly to the album's narrative of transformation amid decay, rooted in personal and cultural observations from Los Angeles.[17]Release and promotion
Announcement and singles
On April 24, 2015, HEALTH announced their third studio album, Death Magic, through Loma Vista Recordings, revealing the artwork featuring a stark black-and-white design and confirming a release date of August 7, 2015.[20] Pre-orders became available immediately via the label's website and digital platforms, allowing fans early access to the full album in various formats.[20] This marked the band's return to full-length releases after a six-year hiatus since Get Color in 2009, building anticipation through their ongoing soundtrack contributions, such as the score for Max Payne 3 in 2012.[8][11] The album's lead single, "New Coke," was released on the same day as the announcement, made available for streaming on platforms like Spotify and receiving initial airplay on alternative radio stations such as SiriusXM's Lithium channel.[20] Followed by "Stonefist" on June 12, 2015, which premiered via streaming services and garnered radio play on stations like KEXP, the track emphasized the album's noisy, electronic edge.[21][22] The third single, "Men Today," arrived on July 24, 2015, also offered for streaming and broadcast on indie rock outlets, further teasing the album's themes of life and decay.[23][24] The first two singles were each accompanied by a music video to heighten promotion. Death Magic was issued in multiple formats to cater to collectors and casual listeners, including digital download, standard CD, and vinyl editions comprising a black pressing and limited-edition variants like white vinyl.[1] The rollout positioned the album as HEALTH's most ambitious project yet, leveraging their soundtrack buzz to signal a evolved sound blending noise rock with pop sensibilities after years of intermittent releases.[6][11]Marketing and music videos
The promotional campaign for Death Magic began in early 2015 with the release of teaser content across social media platforms, building anticipation for the album's August rollout. HEALTH shared cryptic snippets and artwork previews on their official channels, including Instagram and Twitter, to engage fans with the album's themes of decay and euphoria. A key element was the official trailer, directed by legendary filmmaker Pablo Ferro and edited by Luke Lynch, which premiered on YouTube on August 10, 2015, featuring surreal, high-contrast visuals synced to album excerpts. Festival appearances further amplified the buzz, with the band previewing tracks like "New Coke" during select U.S. shows in spring 2015, though no Coachella performance was documented for that year. The album's music videos emphasized visual experimentation aligned with HEALTH's noise-rock aesthetic. The lead single "New Coke" received a surreal, slow-motion video directed by band bassist John Famiglietti, released on April 24, 2015, depicting a debauched nightclub scene with elements like stylized vomiting and distorted nightlife chaos. For "Stonefist," HEALTH issued an abstract video on August 13, 2015, directed by the collective Naked Faces and produced by Jay Patumanoan, showcasing industrial, fragmented imagery of urban decay and rhythmic destruction. A supplementary live rendition of "Stonefist," captured as a single-take performance at London's The Dome in June 2015 and directed by Giorgio Testi, was released on October 11, 2015, highlighting the band's energetic stage presence. No official music video was produced for "Men Today." To support Death Magic, HEALTH embarked on an extensive tour commencing in August 2015, spanning North America and Europe with setlists heavily featuring new material alongside earlier hits. The European leg kicked off in October, including dates in Hamburg (October 11 at Mojo), Copenhagen (October 12 at Pumpehuset), Berlin (October 13 at Berghain), and Prague (October 17 at Meet Factory), among others, concluding by late October. The North American portion followed in November and December, starting November 10 in San Diego at the Casbah and wrapping December 9 in Portland at the Hawthorne Theatre, with support acts like Pictureplane on select dates. Typical setlists incorporated album tracks such as "New Coke," "Stonefist," "Men Today," and "Salvia," blending them with fan favorites like "Crimewave" for a runtime of around 60-75 minutes. Merchandise tied to the release included exclusive physical and digital variants to incentivize fans. A limited-edition indie-exclusive vinyl LP, pressed on standard black, was offered through independent retailers with an early release window ahead of the August 7 street date. Additionally, a limited-edition black-shell cassette was produced, featuring the full tracklist in a collectible format. Digital pre-orders via platforms like Bandcamp included instant access to singles, though no bundled remixes were part of the initial offerings; the band's later Disco3 :: Party Favors (2017) would expand on remix content from the album.Reception
Critical reviews
Upon its release, Death Magic received generally favorable reviews from contemporary critics, as reflected in its aggregate score of 73 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 22 reviews.[25] Pitchfork awarded the album 7.8 out of 10, praising HEALTH's evolution toward embracing pop impulses within their electronic noise framework, describing it as "a bold, albeit occasionally jarring, step forward" that highlights the band's maturation.[12] NME gave it 8 out of 10, commending the "infectious hooks" and the way "almost every song bursts with new ideas, from the swathes of synths to the thunderous percussion." Billboard highlighted the album as "2015's coolest heavy album," noting its blend of industrial intensity with modern production influences from collaborators like the Haxan Cloak and Kanye West's engineer.[6] Some reviewers offered criticisms, pointing to perceived dated elements in its industrial sound. The Guardian described it as "dated and attention-seeking," arguing that despite provocative titles like "Drugs Exist" and "Hurt Yourself," the album came across as dull and failed to deliver on its threatening intentions.[26] Others, such as those in lower-scoring outlets, felt it lacked the raw energy of HEALTH's prior work, with one review calling it less cohesive and more meandering than expected.[27] Overall sentiments echoed Pitchfork's view of the record as "a bold step into pop territory" that absorbed the band's discography into a more accessible form.[12]Accolades
Death Magic received a nomination for Groundbreaking Album of the Year at the 2016 A2IM Libera Awards, recognizing its innovative blend of noise rock and electronic elements.[28] The album appeared on several critics' year-end lists for 2015, highlighting its impact within indie, noise, and electronic music circles. Representative placements include:| Publication | Ranking | List Title |
|---|---|---|
| Treble | 17 | Top 50 Albums of 2015[29] |
| Treble | 10 | Top 10 Electronic Albums of 2015[30] |
| Noisey | 47 | 50 Best Albums of 2015[31] |
| Pigeons & Planes | 43 | Best Albums of 2015[32] |
| Drowned in Sound | 52 | Favourite Albums of the Year 2015[33] |
| mxdwn | 5 | Album of the Year 2015 (Top 50)[34] |
Commercial performance
Chart positions
Death Magic achieved modest chart performance, primarily on niche and genre-specific rankings. In the United States, it debuted and peaked at number 5 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart, reflecting its appeal to emerging artists. The album also reached number 24 on the Billboard Alternative Albums chart and number 23 on the Billboard Indie Store Album Sales chart in 2015. Internationally, Death Magic peaked at number 30 on the UK Official Record Store Chart.[36] Among its singles, "New Coke" was released as the lead single but did not chart on major Billboard airplay charts.Sales and certifications
Death Magic achieved modest commercial success as an independent release through Loma Vista Recordings.[37] The album received no formal certifications from organizations like the RIAA or BPI, consistent with its status as a niche noise rock project lacking major label backing.[37] This resurgence in the 2020s can be attributed to the band's growing profile from subsequent releases and collaborations.Track listing
All tracks are written by HEALTH.| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Victim" | 2:00 |
| 2. | "Stonefist" | 3:24 |
| 3. | "Men Today" | 2:03 |
| 4. | "Flesh World (UK)" | 3:54 |
| 5. | "Courtship II" | 3:35 |
| 6. | "Dark Enough" | 3:42 |
| 7. | "Life" | 3:53 |
| 8. | "Salvia" | 1:48 |
| 9. | "New Coke" | 3:39 |
| 10. | "L.A. Looks" | 3:24 |
| 11. | "Hurt Yourself" | 4:10 |
| 12. | "Drugs Exist" | 3:52 |