Drone:Nodrone

Album: Songs of a Lost World (2024)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Drone: Nodrone" is a noir rocker that feels as though it has crawled straight out of a foggy existential crisis and into your headphones. The song is preoccupied with questions of identity, uncertainty, and the general confusion that comes with trying to make sense of a chaotic world.
  • The Cure frontman Robert Smith's lyrics reveal a sense of disconnection, alienation, and that peculiar, gnawing brand of self-doubt that makes you wonder if you've misplaced your very essence somewhere under the sofa cushions.

    The song was inspired by a drone that flew over Smith's garden. He told Radio X it was "hovering and filming" and it made him feel "so vulnerable." The experience threw him into a spiral of doubt. Was he being watched? Was he imagining it? And lurking underneath this paranoia was a deeper question about identity.
  • Musically, the track's jagged rhythm and deep bassline give it an urgent, propulsive energy that keeps you on edge. It features distorted beats, atmospheric synths, and Reeves Gabrels' guitar solo.

    Former David Bowie and Tin Machine guitarist Reeves Gabrels first played on a Cure song in 1997 when he guested on "Wrong Number." This initial collaboration blossomed into a more significant role in 2012 when Gabrels joined The Cure as a guest musician for a series of concerts. Impressed by his performances, The Cure enlisted him as an official member of the band.
  • "Drone:Nodrone" is a track from The Cure's 2024 album Songs of a Lost World. The band debuted it live at the Troxy in London during the album launch show on November 1, 2024. Images of California cities were projected during the performance, conveying a critique of rampant consumerism and the unchecked rise of technology.
  • For those keen to explore the broader musical fascination with drones - both the unmanned kind and the metaphorical - there are several noteworthy examples:

    2014 "Morning Falling" by David Crosby
    This song, from Crosby's album Croz, is a hard look at drone warfare, telling the story of an innocent Afghan family killed by a drone strike. The song has a mournful, Arab-inflected melody that creates a haunting atmosphere fitting its subject matter.

    2015 "Drones" by Muse
    Drones is a concept album that deals extensively with themes related to drones, both literal and metaphorical. The album's title track is an a cappella piece that serves as a lament for drone victims.

    2015 "Reapers" by Muse.
    Another track from Drones, "Reapers" Focuses directly on drone warfare and its lethal implications, with some of the band's most intense instrumentation.

    2015 "Drone Bomb Me" by Anohni.
    A provocative song from the perspective of a young Afghan girl whose family is killed in a drone attack.

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