Synthpop, minimal wave, post-punk, goth, new romantic — fans and critics alike have dug deeply into their vintage thesauruses to describe the beguiling work of Nation of Language. And if you can’t precisely define the band, that’s the point. Frontman Ian Richard Devaney has become prodigious in expanding what synthesizer-driven music can evoke, such that his output is as much an extrasensory journey as it is an all-too-human destination. With that experience in mind, he wrote the band’s fourth album — the spectral, spacious Dance Called Memory — in the most humble of ways: chipping away at melancholia by sitting around and strumming his guitar.
Nation of Language’s first two albums, Introduction, Presence (2020), and A Way Forward (2021), came as pandemic godsends: gorgeous, relatable soundtracks to our collective doldrums. But it was their last LP, Strange Disciple (2023), that catapulted the group from cultural standouts to critical darlings, with the album being named Rough Trade’s Album of the Year. With that release, Pitchfork wrote that the band “are learning what it means to get bigger and better.”
In this era quickly being defined by the rise of AI supplanting human creators I’m focusing more on the human condition, and I need the underlying music to support that… Instead of hopelessness, I want to leave the listener with a feeling of us really seeing one another, that our individual struggles can actually unite us in empathy.”
Tracklisting:
1.Can't Face Another One
2.In Another Life
3.Silhouette
4.Now That You're Gone
5.I'm Not Ready for the Change
6.Can You Reach Me
7.Inept Apollo
8.Under the Water
9.In Your Head
10.Nights of Weight
RIYL: My Bloody Valentine, Kraftwerk, post-punk, new romantic.
top of page
Free delivery on orders over £60 Orders placed before 3pm will be dispatched within 48 hours* Loyalty points earned on all orders We buy your old vinyl International shipping available

£26.75Price
Due for release - 19th September 2025
Free UK shipping on orders of £50+
bottom of page