La Dispute Unleash Epic New Song “Environmental Catastrophe Film”: Stream

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La Dispute have unveiled the second act of their forthcoming album No One Was Driving the Car, arriving September 5th via Epitaph.

The nine-minute “Environmental Catastrophe Film” is a single track broken up into three parts and showcases the Michigan band’s highly conceptual songcraft. The arrangement ducks and weaves around the narrative thread of the lyrics, the group dishing out devastating emotional post-hardcore that’s informed by the open-ended nature of prog and post-rock.

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Vocalist Jordan Dreyer pulled back the curtain on the ambitious track in the following press release statement:

“the second act—more or less the thematic center of the record—is a single song split into three parts. it begins with a boy beside a creek-bed in a wooded area near home, holding a snapping turtle above the flowing water, before tracing its winding path to the river around which the city was first built, and through a brief history of the city itself—its settlement, the creation of the christian reformed church, and the furniture industry that dominated its early economic growth.

from there we return to the boy beside the creek. he sees his own lack of control in the flailing creature he holds, then again at church, listening to a sermon delivered on the calvinist doctrines of predestination, man’s innate and total depravity, and the irresistible grace of his family’s god. at the end of it, he returns for the first time in adulthood to that same church, at the funeral of an old friend dead by suicide, from which the conversation shifts back to the creek as metaphor for life and time, and to what we ultimately maintain the least control over in life: that we can change neither the fact it moves nor the direction it ceaselessly does.

in the final section, the city’s history of the furniture manufacturing returns as additional metaphor, presenting us as un-hewn wood, locked within the lathe of time and against its blade turned, to carve away with each rotation fragments of self en route to new forms—perhaps useful, perhaps beautiful, perhaps not. and as the layers shaved away fall to ground, they are swept up at day’s end and thrown inside the furnace: to burn and be breathed in as smoke, felt as heat, and to return one day as rain from the atmosphere in which they’ve dissipated. what’s left on the lathe is given purpose—placed as slats in chair backs or as table legs—and from this image the focus narrows again: to life with another—where, ultimately, the narrator finds his own comfort against the tumult—via the furniture moved and used by them from one shared home to another, and the person with whom he’s shared them.”

“Environmental Catastrophe Film” follows “Act One” — a suite of three songs — that introduced the LP upon its announcement in May. At the time, the band also detailed a leg of US tour dates in September supporting the LP’s release, with the jaunt kicking off on release day (September 5th) in Detroit. Get tickets here.

Stream the lyric video for “Environmental Catastrophe Film” below.

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