THERAPY? - Release New Video For "Success? Success Is Survival" Off Latest Album 'Cleave'


Northern Irish alternative-rock band Therapy? have revealed their official lyric video for the track "Success? Success Is Survival" taken off the bands fifteenth studio album CLEAVE. The video is now out via Marshall Records and available at the following link.

Not afraid to speak about injustices, vocalist Andy Cairns explores some of the nature in the lyrics commenting: “The song is about the growing divide between the haves and have-nots.” And the societal views in the track “Vladimir Lenin said, ‘Capitalist society, is and has always been horror without end’. The opening line of the track is “the cream of this country, rich and thick” and is paraphrased from Samuel Beckett to describe his patrons at Portora School for Boys in Enniskillen (i.e. rich, entitled). This then leads into the pre-chorus “that’s the order that’s been set, we’re expected to accept” this looks at how a ‘caste’ system is increasing. The second verse contrasts this with imagery of desperate immigrants who regularly risk their own and their children’s lives to cross perilous water. The title and chorus of the song comes from Leonard Cohen. Asked in an interview in the early 70’s what his definition of success was he replied “Success? Success is survival."

Therapy?’s fifteenth studio album CLEAVE was released on September 21st 2018. Roughly themed around notions of duality and division, the band’s follow-up to 2015’s acclaimed 'Disquiet' - and their first recording for new label Marshall Records – is a sharply focused, fiercely intelligent, impassioned and empowering set of songs from a band operating at a creative and artistic peak. A scathing, incisive state-of-the-nation address, investigating the schisms in contemporary society and the motivations of those seeking to propagate disjuncture, it’s a powerful, challenging, uncompromising collection from a band never afraid to confront and dissect humanity’s darkest impulses.

From the thrillingly propulsive assault of 'Wreck It Like Beckett' via the addictive 'Callow' (the album's first single, out now) and the unsettling 'I Stand Alone' to the disquieting, bleakly beautiful 'No Sunshine', the ten tracks which make up CLEAVE coalesce to paint a portrait of a fractured, dislocated world rent by unprincipled, mendacious masters.

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