Everything Was Beautiful
Everything Was Beautiful is the ninth studio album by the English space rock band Spiritualized, released on 22 April 2022 by Fat Possum Records.[1] Primarily written, produced, and performed by the band's leader Jason Pierce (also known as J Spaceman), the record features contributions from over 30 musicians and singers, including string and brass sections, choirs, and bells from the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.[2] Recorded during the COVID-19 lockdown across 11 studios and Pierce's home in London, it was inspired by walks through an empty city filled with birdsong, evoking a sense of isolation and transcendence.[2] The album comprises seven tracks spanning 44 minutes, blending orchestral space rock with influences from gospel, blues, free jazz, the Stooges, and the Rolling Stones.[1][3] Pierce played 16 different instruments on the recording, which underwent a year of mixing to achieve its layered, detailed sound.[2] The album's themes revolve around nostalgia, emotional vulnerability, and cosmic exploration, often self-referentially echoing Spiritualized's earlier works like the 1997 album Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space.[3] Standout tracks include "Let It Bleed (For Iggy)", a tribute to Iggy Pop with raw Stooges-inspired energy, and "The Mainline Song", which builds to a transcendent gospel climax.[3] Critics praised its refined production and alchemical power, with Pitchfork awarding it a 7.8 out of 10 and describing it as "gloriously satisfying and self-referential".[3] It marks a return to the band's expansive, orchestral sound after the more subdued And Nothing Hurt (2018), reaffirming Spiritualized's place in the neo-psychedelic and dream pop traditions.[3]Background and conception
Development
The album Everything Was Beautiful originated from a series of demo sessions recorded in 2013 and 2014, which were initially intended to form the basis of Spiritualized's eighth studio album, And Nothing Hurt, released in 2018.[4] Nine of those demos were used for And Nothing Hurt, while the remaining seven were set aside as unused material. Originally envisioned as part of a double album—a "grand gesture" as described by frontman Jason Pierce—the project was scaled back on the advice of Fat Possum Records head Matthew Johnson, with the leftover demos preserved for potential future use.[4][5] These unused demos were revisited during the COVID-19 pandemic, with work commencing in the summer of 2020 at producer David Wrench's studio and continuing through Easter 2021.[5] Jason Pierce, Spiritualized's primary songwriter and leader (also known as J. Spaceman), refined the songs during this period, drawing inspiration from his personal experiences of isolation and lockdown in London. He described embracing the solitude as "beautiful," recounting walks through an eerily empty city filled with birdsong and devoid of usual urban noise, which reshaped his approach to the material by emphasizing themes of renewal and introspection.[6] This iterative process involved weekly sessions where Pierce and Wrench layered and balanced elements from the original demos with new recordings, resulting in compositions that Pierce characterized as "ridiculously complicated" yet cohesive.[5] In late 2021, on November 2, Spiritualized announced the decision to develop these refined demos into a full album, marking the band's ninth studio release and ending a four-year gap since And Nothing Hurt.[7] The album comprises seven tracks with a total length of 44 minutes, prioritizing concise structures that evoke expansive, symphonic arrangements.[8] The title itself derives from a line in Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slaughterhouse-Five: "Everything was beautiful, and nothing hurt."[5]Inspirations
The album's title is drawn directly from the poignant closing line of Kurt Vonnegut's 1969 novel Slaughterhouse-Five: "Everything was beautiful and nothing hurt," a phrase that Billy Pilgrim utters in reflection on his death, symbolizing a bittersweet blend of nostalgia, transcendence, and ironic detachment from suffering. Jason Pierce, the album's primary creator, selected this quote for its layered resonance—merging sarcasm, cynicism, and fleeting beauty—which aligned with the project's aim to evoke emotional complexity without overt narrative adaptation.[5] Thematic elements are inspired by the redemptive and communal spirit of gospel music, as well as the expansive, anthemic builds of classic rock, channeling Pierce's enduring fascination with spiritual uplift and psychedelic escapism as pathways to emotional release.[3] These influences manifest in the album's soaring choral arrangements and riff-driven crescendos, drawing from traditions like free jazz-infused blues and garage rock to create a sense of cosmic unity amid chaos.[5] Pierce's personal experiences profoundly shaped the work, including ongoing health struggles that have long informed his songwriting and the introspective isolation of the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020–2021, which allowed uninterrupted refinement of tracks originally demoed during the And Nothing Hurt era.[9] These circumstances imbued the songs with motifs of profound longing, collective harmony, and the ephemeral quality of joy, transforming personal vulnerability into a broader meditation on resilience and connection.[10] The album's artwork and promotional materials further echo Vonnegut's ironic optimism through a medication-themed pill packet design set against a serene meadow backdrop, evoking a mock-wellness advertisement that subtly underscores themes of healing and illusion.[5] This visual motif carries no direct adaptations from the novel but includes lyrical allusions, such as the spoken interjection "Everything was beautiful" by Pierce's daughter Poppy in the track "Always Together with You," reinforcing the album's core aesthetic of tender, otherworldly affirmation.[11]Recording and production
Sessions
The recording of Everything Was Beautiful occurred across 11 different studios as well as Jason Pierce's home, spanning from summer 2020 to Easter 2021, with primary work taking place in the UK under COVID-19 pandemic restrictions that limited travel and gatherings.[5][12] Pierce initially handled much of the multitracking and overdubs solo, drawing on the isolation of lockdowns for focused refinement of the tracks, before incorporating contributions from over 30 musicians and singers to build out the layered arrangements.[12] The production timeline expanded upon initial demos originating from songwriting sessions in 2013–2014—some of which informed the 2018 album ...And Nothing Hurt—with significant development occurring in 2021 amid the ongoing pandemic.[5][13] A year-long mixing process, involving iterative revisions for balance and "proper chaos," concluded shortly before the album's release.[12][5] Vinyl pressing delays, stemming from manufacturing issues beyond the label's control, postponed the original February 25, 2022, launch to April 22, 2022, via Fat Possum Records.[14][15] Throughout, the sessions prioritized analog warmth to enhance the gospel-influenced elements, such as choir-backed swells and brass sections, evoking a live, immersive quality.[12] Pierce's proficiency across 16 instruments underpinned the core tracking efforts.[12]Personnel involvement
Jason Pierce, performing under his longtime alias J. Spaceman, led the creation of Everything Was Beautiful as the primary artist, handling lead vocals and contributing on 16 instruments, which encompassed guitars, keyboards, percussion, and various others to shape the album's expansive sound.[12] His multi-instrumental approach allowed for intricate layering, drawing from his vision of blending psychedelic rock with gospel and orchestral elements.[3] The album incorporated select backing vocals from notable collaborators, including country artist Nikki Lane on the track "Crazy," where her contributions added a soulful, Wynette-inspired texture to the ballad.[16] Pierce's daughter, Poppy Spaceman (credited as P. Spaceman), provided vocals on "Always Together With You," opening the record with a spoken element that set its thematic tone of cosmic romance and introspection.[17] Additional musicians formed a limited core ensemble amid the project's remote nature, with guitarist Doggen Foster delivering key riffs and textures, and Tom Edwards handling drums, percussion, timpani, vibraphone, glockenspiel, marimba, and orchestral bass drum to drive the rhythmic foundation.[18] Longtime bandmate and collaborator John Coxon also participated as a musician, supporting the album's dense arrangements. Guest contributions extended to string and brass sections, involving over 30 musicians and singers overall, including choirs and clarinetists, to enrich the orchestral swells without a traditional full-band setup.[12] Pierce took on primary production duties, engineering much of the material himself during sessions spread across 11 studios and his home, with mixing assistance from David Wrench over a year-long process.[12][19] The COVID-19 pandemic precluded conventional group recording, leading to a reliance on overdubs and isolated performances that nonetheless yielded some of Spiritualized's most vibrant, live-like results since their 1998 live album.[12]Musical style
Genres and influences
Everything Was Beautiful exemplifies psychedelic rock infused with gospel and classic rock elements, characterized by slow-burn builds that culminate in soulful, expansive choruses.[3] The album's sound draws heavily from gospel traditions through its use of layered vocal ensembles that add emotional depth and spiritual resonance.[20] Classic rock influences are evident in its anthemic structures, inspired by The Rolling Stones' epic ballads, which contribute to the record's sweeping, stadium-ready dynamics.[3] Additionally, psychedelic experimentation links back to Jason Pierce's earlier works, such as Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space, where ambient and space rock motifs first took shape in Spiritualized's oeuvre.[3] The sonic palette features intricate layered instrumentation, including reverb-drenched guitars that evoke cosmic drift, orchestral swells from strings and brass for dramatic tension, and harmonic vocal stacks that build a transcendent, otherworldly atmosphere.[21] This blend creates a dense yet euphoric texture, blending free jazz improvisation with bluesy undertones to differentiate the album from Pierce's more ambient-leaning prior releases.[20] The gospel elements, in particular, reflect Pierce's ongoing exploration of spiritual music, though the album's creation during the COVID-19 pandemic further emphasized themes of isolation and redemption.[2]Song structures
The songs on Everything Was Beautiful are characterized by extended structures that allow for gradual development and emotional escalation, often diverging from conventional pop formats to incorporate expansive instrumental sections. For instance, the opening track "Always Together With You," clocking in at 6:39, begins with sparse guitar strums and soft-spoken vocals before building into a fuzzy psychedelic dreamscape, incorporating serene orchestral flourishes, layered background vocals, and a full band rush with horns for a gospel-rock crescendo.[22][3] Similarly, the album's epic closer "I'm Coming Home Again," lasting 9:53, unfolds through repetitive phrasing like "I'm coming home again" amid a dubby swamp ambiance, layering instruments such as bells and viola to create an intensifying, edgy atmosphere, ending on ominous tones.[23][24] Across the album, tracks commonly employ verse-chorus forms expanded with instrumental bridges, leveraging dynamic shifts from quiet introspection—marked by minimal guitar figures and ambient drones—to orchestral peaks driven by freight-train rhythms from drums and bass. These arrangements balance chaos and cohesion through over 30 musicians, including brass, strings, and choirs, resulting in vertiginous climaxes that heighten the hypnotic quality.[3][23] Notable compositional techniques include multi-tracked vocals that produce a hymnal effect, as seen in the rich harmonies and choral layers that elevate devotional choruses, alongside mantric repetitions in lyrics for a trance-like immersion. Analog tape saturation contributes to the overall warmth, enhancing the lush, orchestral space rock texture without overpowering the core melodies.[22][3] The track "Let It Bleed (For Iggy)," dedicated to Iggy Pop as a tribute to his Stooges legacy, adopts a verse-chorus structure with creeping melancholy in the verses building to a transcendent, choir-fueled chorus, delivering raw rocker energy enveloped in a psychedelic haze through punishing orchestral swells and key changes.[9][3][25]Release
Announcement and singles
Spiritualized announced their ninth studio album, Everything Was Beautiful, on October 29, 2021, through an official blog post on their website, setting an initial release date of February 25, 2022, via Bella Union and Fat Possum Records.[12] On February 3, 2022, the band revealed a postponement to April 22, 2022, attributing the change to uncontrollable manufacturing delays. This marked a continuation of their partnership with Fat Possum Records, which had handled worldwide reissues of Spiritualized's early catalog throughout 2021, including albums like Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space and Let It Come Down.[26] The lead single, "Always Together with You"—a reworked version of a 2014 demo—debuted on November 2, 2021, coinciding with broader press coverage of the album announcement.[7] The track was accompanied by a music video directed by Spiritualized frontman Jason Pierce, featuring stark black-and-white visuals of the band performing in a minimalist studio setting.[27] Subsequent singles built anticipation leading up to the revised release. "Crazy," released on January 10, 2022, showcased gospel elements through its soaring harmonies and soulful backing vocals provided by country artist Nikki Lane, who co-wrote the track with Pierce.[28][16] The song's video, also directed by Pierce and inspired by Andy Warhol's screen tests, presented a series of static portraits emphasizing emotional intensity.[29] The rollout concluded with "The Mainline Song" on March 7, 2022, a psychedelic rocker characterized by its driving rhythms and expansive, train-like propulsion evoking classic rock influences.[30][31] Pierce directed its accompanying monochrome video, completing a trilogy of self-helmed visuals for the album's singles and capturing the band's live energy in a raw, performance-focused style.[32]Promotion and touring
The promotional campaign for Everything Was Beautiful centered on digital pre-orders available through platforms like Fat Possum Records and the band's official store, which included instant gratification tracks such as the lead single "Always Together with You" for early purchasers.[33] Limited-edition vinyl bundles were offered, including deluxe pink vinyl editions and signed copies to appeal to collectors.[33] Social media teasers from the band's official channels and announcements highlighted the album's title as completing a Kurt Vonnegut quote from Slaughterhouse-Five—"Everything was beautiful and nothing hurt"—first referenced in their prior release And Nothing Hurt, tying into themes of transcendence and melancholy.[7] To support the album's launch, Spiritualized embarked on a 2022 world tour beginning in the United States in late March, with the first show on March 31 at Dallas's Granada Theater, followed by April 1 at Austin's Scoot Inn.[34] The tour extended to Europe later that year, encompassing dates in the UK and continental venues.[35] Early performances featured full album plays, as seen in the April 1 Austin setlist dedicated entirely to Everything Was Beautiful.[36] Following the album's April 2022 release, Spiritualized continued select performances in 2023, including an opening slot for Queens of the Stone Age at the Kia Forum in Inglewood, California, on December 16, where tracks like "The A Song (Laid in Your Arms)" were performed alongside catalog material.[37] No major tours directly tied to Everything Was Beautiful occurred in 2024 or 2025, though album songs were integrated into live sets during sporadic appearances. The band's 2025 tour celebrating the 30th anniversary of Pure Phase featured full performances of that album at U.S. dates in September, including Brooklyn's Kings Theatre on September 25 and Los Angeles's Orpheum Theatre on September 28, as well as additional UK and European shows in March (e.g., Glasgow and Manchester), October (Worthing), and December (Cardiff).[38] As of November 2025, no new reissues or special editions of the album have been announced.[39]Reception
Critical reviews
Upon its release, Everything Was Beautiful received universal acclaim from music critics. The album earned a Metascore of 83 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 24 reviews, indicating widespread praise for its ambitious orchestration and emotional depth.[40] Critics frequently lauded the album's innovative fusion of psychedelic rock with gospel influences, viewing it as a triumphant evolution in Jason Pierce's songwriting. Pitchfork awarded it 7.8 out of 10, highlighting how the record refines Spiritualized's orchestral space rock with alchemical power, blending fuzzed-up guitars, strings, brass, and choirs into a hypnotic cosmic sheen, where stronger songs achieve a transcendent quality through devotional howls and cathartic payoffs.[3] Uncut gave it a near-perfect 9 out of 10, calling it "a record that manages to be both direct and concise yet also wildly experimental, tender, nihilistic and joyous," emphasizing its balance of intimacy and grandeur.[4] Similarly, SPIN praised the album's meticulous curation, noting that it functions "like a museum, preserving the best of their sound while polishing the crucial details," resulting in a spellbinding space pop experience that fine-tunes astral pop with shocking consistency.[22] While overwhelmingly positive, some reviews pointed to minor criticisms regarding Pierce's stylistic familiarity, though they often framed this as a strength when paired with subtle advancements. Paste Magazine, scoring it 8.5 out of 10, observed that the album evokes a sense of familiarity inherent to Pierce's oeuvre but appreciated its evolution toward greater conciseness and introspection, marking another career-best in Spiritualized's euphoric discography with bombastic, heavenly textures that overwhelm the senses.[41] Overall, there was a critical consensus that Everything Was Beautiful represented a return to form after 2018's And Nothing Hurt, refreshing the band's psychedelic template through gospel-tinged arrangements and layered instrumentation; reviews from 2022 continue to dominate discourse, with no significant reevaluations emerging by 2025.[42]Accolades and rankings
Upon its release, Everything Was Beautiful received recognition in several year-end critic polls, reflecting its strong reception within indie and alternative music circles. AnyDecentMusic? ranked it the 18th best album of 2022, based on aggregated critic scores averaging 8.2 out of 10.[43] It also appeared in Uncut's top 75 albums of the year, praised for its experimental yet accessible blend of space rock elements.[44] The album earned a nomination at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards in 2023 for Best Recording Package, with art director Mark Farrow credited for the design, though it did not win. No nominations followed for major categories like Album of the Year or in prestigious awards such as the Mercury Prize. In user-driven rankings, Best Ever Albums placed it 39th among 2022 releases, 171st in the 2020s decade, and 3,621st overall, underscoring its niche but enduring appeal among fans of psychedelic and shoegaze genres.[45] By 2025, Everything Was Beautiful has been cited in music retrospectives as a pinnacle of Jason Pierce's career with Spiritualized, often highlighted for revitalizing the band's orchestral space rock sound and contributing to discussions of their lasting influence on experimental music.[46] Recent tour coverage in 2024 and 2025, including performances integrating tracks from the album into sets revisiting earlier works like Pure Phase, has reinforced its status through positive blog and live reviews, without garnering additional formal accolades.[47]Commercial performance
Charts
Everything Was Beautiful achieved its strongest commercial performance in the United Kingdom, where it peaked at number 5 on the Official Albums Chart on May 5, 2022.[48] This result underscored Spiritualized's dedicated cult following within the UK indie music scene, as the album also reached number 2 on the Official Independent Albums Chart.[49] It spent one week in the top 100 overall but demonstrated greater endurance on the Scottish Albums Chart, peaking at number 3 and charting for three weeks.[48] Internationally, the album saw more modest placements. In Switzerland, it peaked at number 20 on the Swiss Albums Chart upon its entry on May 1, 2022. On the German Albums Chart (Offizielle Deutsche Charts), Everything Was Beautiful debuted and peaked at number 50 on April 29, 2022, for one week.[51] It also charted in Belgium, reaching number 153 on the Flanders Albums Chart, number 77 on the Wallonia Albums Chart, and number 39 on the French Albums Chart. No other major worldwide charts featured significant entries.| Chart (2022) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| UK Albums (OCC) | 5 |
| Scottish Albums (OCC) | 3 |
| UK Independent Albums (OCC) | 2 |
| Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade) | 20 |
| German Albums (Offizielle Top 100) | 50 |
Sales figures
Upon its release in April 2022, Everything Was Beautiful sold approximately 4,622 units in its first week in the United Kingdom.[52] No RIAA certifications were awarded, though its success highlighted the viability of indie label releases in a streaming-dominated market.Credits and track listing
Track listing
All tracks are written by Jason Pierce, except "Crazy" (co-written with Nikki Lane).[19]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Always Together with You" | 6:39 |
| 2. | "Best Thing You Never Had (The D Song)" | 5:52 |
| 3. | "Let It Bleed (For Iggy)" | 4:41 |
| 4. | "Crazy" | 3:52 |
| 5. | "The Mainline Song" | 5:56 |
| 6. | "The A Song (Laid in Your Arms)" | 7:07 |
| 7. | "I'm Coming Home Again" | 9:54 |
Personnel
The personnel credited on Everything Was Beautiful include a core group of musicians led by Jason Pierce, with additional contributions from guest artists, a string quartet, and production and technical staff. The album features Pierce performing on 16 different instruments across its tracks, along with over 30 musicians and singers including string and brass sections, choirs, and bells from the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.[12] Musicians- Jason Pierce – vocals and various instruments (16 in total)[12]
- Nikki Lane – vocals (track 4)[12]
- Poppy Spaceman – backing vocals (track 7)[23]
- Doggen – guitar[18]
- Tom Edwards – percussion, keyboards[18]