
The World Is A Beautiful Place and I Am No Longer Afraid To Die "Illusory Walls"
The Deathwish Exclusive variant is limited to 300 copies on transparent orange vinyl.
Sometimes, the best place to begin is at the end. If you really want to dig deep into Illusory Walls, the fourth album by The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die, it definitely helps to do that. Thatâs because epic closer âFewer Afraidââall 19 minutes, 44 seconds of itâdoesnât just revisit the themes and ideas on the ten songs that precede it, but also offers a self-aware summary of the Connecticut bandâs entire history. Itâs the conclusion of all the stories within the record as well as a nod to all the lives that helped make themâlittle glimpses of everything thatâs come before, on both a micro, immediate level, and a more universal one.
âThat song is a higher level look at my whole life and the whole world,â explains vocalist/guitarist David F. Bello, âas well as the album, our band, and our discography. It places the band in the context of the rest of the world as if weâre listening to everything that came before. It touches on all the themes of the previous songs, but there are also callbacks to songs from earlier in our career. But in this song, theyâre the object, not the subjectâIâm talking about a world in which these things happen, not talking about these things happening.â
âThe idea of that song seemed easy enough,â adds guitarist Chris Teti, âbecause we thought weâd just have to play the same thing over and over again for a kind of Explosions In The Sky-type effect. But it was incredibly difficult to make a vocal work over it, and it took a long time. We did the entirety of our previous LP in about three weeks, and we spent at least a couple weeks just on that one song. It was a crazy endeavor.â
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the bandâcompleted by Steven K. Buttery (drums and percussion), Joshua Cyr (bass/vocals), and Katie Dvorak (vocals/synth)âhad nothing but time to realize the full extent of their musical and thematic aspirations. And so, four years on from lauded third album Always Foreign, they were able to make what is undoubtedly the bandâs most ambitious and epic record to date. Written and recorded remotelyâa first for the bandâIllusory Walls takes on the weight of human existence while itâs buckling under the pressure of todayâs near-dystopian society. Personal anxieties and political struggles collide with a series of portentous, apocalyptic, and dramatic tunes, resulting in some of the darkest music the band has made since forming in 2009.
âThe world kind of felt like an apocalypse at the time,â remembers Teti, who produced the bandâs first three records, and co-produced this one with his studio partner Greg Thomas (END, Misery Signals). âI also wanted to make everything feel bigger and more fucked up. We didnât go as extreme as we could have on the previous record musically, so this time I was like, âWell, if this partâs going to be heavy, itâs got to be fucking heavy.â I felt previously we were in this weird middle ground where we didnât seize it. This time we did.â
Thatâs an understatement. Whereas normally the band would convene for two to three weeks at Tetiâs Silver Bullet Studios, the process for Illusory Walls took about a year. On the one hand, that made for a more relaxed, comfortable experience in the studio, allowing them to realize the full sonic potential of these songs by adding stringsâoverseen by Thomasâto the equation. But it also let them deal better with obstacles that came their way. One such hurdle was Dvorak sustaining an injury that meant she was unable to sing or talk for a couple of months towards the end of 2020. Had they been on a normal recording schedule, she wouldnât have been able to get her vocals done. Instead, she was able to channel what happened into her songs. âQueen Sophie For Presidentâ, for example, is ostensibly about the tenacity of oppression, whether on a personal or political level, but is heavily influenced by her injury.
Elsewhere, the ominous âDied In The Prison Of The Holy Officeâ is a scathing indictment of the Catholic Church, âBlank // Droneâ and âBlank // Workerâ are takedowns of how capitalism and government corruption both kill people for profitâsomething revisited in âFewer Afraidâ and its references to the Sago Mine disasterâwhile the mournful, delicate âInfinite Joshâ sees Bello ruminate on his uncleâs dementia. A callback (and sequel of sorts) to Always Foreignâs closer âInfinite Steveâ, it also finds Bello reckoning with the idea that he may also get it.
âI have this fear that itâs going to happen to me,â he says. âIt probably is happening to me a little bit. It almost feels like it, because during quarantine I was forgetting what day it is, forgetting how to talk to strangers, forgetting so many different pieces of life that felt fundamental to existence. I definitely looked at this as what âInfinite Steveâ would be with the pauses, confusion and sadness at loss of memory, and loss in general.â
Writing about it was, he says, a heavy burden to bear, but as with the rest of this recordâdespite its fateful, doom-laden atmosphereâthereâs nevertheless a glimmer of hope present.
âI try to find optimism in most things,â he continues, âeven government ineptitude or mining disasters. I followed up the Sago references with an image of trailer park labs that arenât doing what you think theyâre doingâtheyâre making insulin because they canât afford it. Iâm just trying to find an overall optimistic look at a dystopian situation, and with âInfinite Joshâ I focused on the good things that are happening so that when I do start to forget things itâll be the good things that I remember. That way itâs not so heartbreaking for me to think about.â
Itâs just one startlingly moving facet of a deeply complex, richly developed, and all-encompassing record, one thatâs full of (hyper-)specific references that are also wholly relatable. For while Illusory Walls certainly draws you deep into the world of the band, it also takes you deeper into your own, into crevices of your mind and life that you perhaps hadnât encountered or werenât able to explore before. To some extent, thatâs the crux of this album, and also its title. Taken from the unlikely source of the Dark Souls video game, Illusory Walls, explains Bello, ârefers to a hidden surface that seems to prevent entry, but upon inspection is nothing more than a visual illusion.â
That extends to many of the themes on the record, but also to the making of the album itself. Because while TWIABP have assumed what Teti calls âthe line-up thatâs going to go to the end of our livesâ, it certainly took breaking through a few of those illusory walls to get there.
âThis album feels like a rebirth,â he says. âI didnât want to just flatline the band. With the previous record, I feel we were kind of just coasting along, so my view for this was that shit had to change. Otherwise, whatâs the point? We needed to get something out of it artistically to be happy with it. So I kind of viewed this record as a make or break. If I wasnât confident in it at the end and it didnât shake up something with the band musically, there was no point. At first, I thought that was going to be really hard, but really, that was just this invisible hurdle. I realized we could do whatever the fuck we wanted. So we did.â
Track Listing:
01. Afraid to Die
02. Queen Sophie for President
03. Invading the World of the Guilty as a Spirit of Vengeance
04. Blank // Drone
05. We Saw Birds through the Hole in the Ceiling
06. Died in the Prison of the Holy Office
07. Your Brain is a Rubbermaid
08. Blank // Worker
09. Trouble
10. Infinite Josh
11. Fewer Afraid
The Deathwish Exclusive variant is limited to 300 copies on transparent orange vinyl.
Sometimes, the best place to begin is at the end. If you really want to dig deep into Illusory Walls, the fourth album by The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die, it definitely helps to do that. Thatâs because epic closer âFewer Afraidââall 19 minutes, 44 seconds of itâdoesnât just revisit the themes and ideas on the ten songs that precede it, but also offers a self-aware summary of the Connecticut bandâs entire history. Itâs the conclusion of all the stories within the record as well as a nod to all the lives that helped make themâlittle glimpses of everything thatâs come before, on both a micro, immediate level, and a more universal one.
âThat song is a higher level look at my whole life and the whole world,â explains vocalist/guitarist David F. Bello, âas well as the album, our band, and our discography. It places the band in the context of the rest of the world as if weâre listening to everything that came before. It touches on all the themes of the previous songs, but there are also callbacks to songs from earlier in our career. But in this song, theyâre the object, not the subjectâIâm talking about a world in which these things happen, not talking about these things happening.â
âThe idea of that song seemed easy enough,â adds guitarist Chris Teti, âbecause we thought weâd just have to play the same thing over and over again for a kind of Explosions In The Sky-type effect. But it was incredibly difficult to make a vocal work over it, and it took a long time. We did the entirety of our previous LP in about three weeks, and we spent at least a couple weeks just on that one song. It was a crazy endeavor.â
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the bandâcompleted by Steven K. Buttery (drums and percussion), Joshua Cyr (bass/vocals), and Katie Dvorak (vocals/synth)âhad nothing but time to realize the full extent of their musical and thematic aspirations. And so, four years on from lauded third album Always Foreign, they were able to make what is undoubtedly the bandâs most ambitious and epic record to date. Written and recorded remotelyâa first for the bandâIllusory Walls takes on the weight of human existence while itâs buckling under the pressure of todayâs near-dystopian society. Personal anxieties and political struggles collide with a series of portentous, apocalyptic, and dramatic tunes, resulting in some of the darkest music the band has made since forming in 2009.
âThe world kind of felt like an apocalypse at the time,â remembers Teti, who produced the bandâs first three records, and co-produced this one with his studio partner Greg Thomas (END, Misery Signals). âI also wanted to make everything feel bigger and more fucked up. We didnât go as extreme as we could have on the previous record musically, so this time I was like, âWell, if this partâs going to be heavy, itâs got to be fucking heavy.â I felt previously we were in this weird middle ground where we didnât seize it. This time we did.â
Thatâs an understatement. Whereas normally the band would convene for two to three weeks at Tetiâs Silver Bullet Studios, the process for Illusory Walls took about a year. On the one hand, that made for a more relaxed, comfortable experience in the studio, allowing them to realize the full sonic potential of these songs by adding stringsâoverseen by Thomasâto the equation. But it also let them deal better with obstacles that came their way. One such hurdle was Dvorak sustaining an injury that meant she was unable to sing or talk for a couple of months towards the end of 2020. Had they been on a normal recording schedule, she wouldnât have been able to get her vocals done. Instead, she was able to channel what happened into her songs. âQueen Sophie For Presidentâ, for example, is ostensibly about the tenacity of oppression, whether on a personal or political level, but is heavily influenced by her injury.
Elsewhere, the ominous âDied In The Prison Of The Holy Officeâ is a scathing indictment of the Catholic Church, âBlank // Droneâ and âBlank // Workerâ are takedowns of how capitalism and government corruption both kill people for profitâsomething revisited in âFewer Afraidâ and its references to the Sago Mine disasterâwhile the mournful, delicate âInfinite Joshâ sees Bello ruminate on his uncleâs dementia. A callback (and sequel of sorts) to Always Foreignâs closer âInfinite Steveâ, it also finds Bello reckoning with the idea that he may also get it.
âI have this fear that itâs going to happen to me,â he says. âIt probably is happening to me a little bit. It almost feels like it, because during quarantine I was forgetting what day it is, forgetting how to talk to strangers, forgetting so many different pieces of life that felt fundamental to existence. I definitely looked at this as what âInfinite Steveâ would be with the pauses, confusion and sadness at loss of memory, and loss in general.â
Writing about it was, he says, a heavy burden to bear, but as with the rest of this recordâdespite its fateful, doom-laden atmosphereâthereâs nevertheless a glimmer of hope present.
âI try to find optimism in most things,â he continues, âeven government ineptitude or mining disasters. I followed up the Sago references with an image of trailer park labs that arenât doing what you think theyâre doingâtheyâre making insulin because they canât afford it. Iâm just trying to find an overall optimistic look at a dystopian situation, and with âInfinite Joshâ I focused on the good things that are happening so that when I do start to forget things itâll be the good things that I remember. That way itâs not so heartbreaking for me to think about.â
Itâs just one startlingly moving facet of a deeply complex, richly developed, and all-encompassing record, one thatâs full of (hyper-)specific references that are also wholly relatable. For while Illusory Walls certainly draws you deep into the world of the band, it also takes you deeper into your own, into crevices of your mind and life that you perhaps hadnât encountered or werenât able to explore before. To some extent, thatâs the crux of this album, and also its title. Taken from the unlikely source of the Dark Souls video game, Illusory Walls, explains Bello, ârefers to a hidden surface that seems to prevent entry, but upon inspection is nothing more than a visual illusion.â
That extends to many of the themes on the record, but also to the making of the album itself. Because while TWIABP have assumed what Teti calls âthe line-up thatâs going to go to the end of our livesâ, it certainly took breaking through a few of those illusory walls to get there.
âThis album feels like a rebirth,â he says. âI didnât want to just flatline the band. With the previous record, I feel we were kind of just coasting along, so my view for this was that shit had to change. Otherwise, whatâs the point? We needed to get something out of it artistically to be happy with it. So I kind of viewed this record as a make or break. If I wasnât confident in it at the end and it didnât shake up something with the band musically, there was no point. At first, I thought that was going to be really hard, but really, that was just this invisible hurdle. I realized we could do whatever the fuck we wanted. So we did.â
Track Listing:
01. Afraid to Die
02. Queen Sophie for President
03. Invading the World of the Guilty as a Spirit of Vengeance
04. Blank // Drone
05. We Saw Birds through the Hole in the Ceiling
06. Died in the Prison of the Holy Office
07. Your Brain is a Rubbermaid
08. Blank // Worker
09. Trouble
10. Infinite Josh
11. Fewer Afraid
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$11.20Description
The Deathwish Exclusive variant is limited to 300 copies on transparent orange vinyl.
Sometimes, the best place to begin is at the end. If you really want to dig deep into Illusory Walls, the fourth album by The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die, it definitely helps to do that. Thatâs because epic closer âFewer Afraidââall 19 minutes, 44 seconds of itâdoesnât just revisit the themes and ideas on the ten songs that precede it, but also offers a self-aware summary of the Connecticut bandâs entire history. Itâs the conclusion of all the stories within the record as well as a nod to all the lives that helped make themâlittle glimpses of everything thatâs come before, on both a micro, immediate level, and a more universal one.
âThat song is a higher level look at my whole life and the whole world,â explains vocalist/guitarist David F. Bello, âas well as the album, our band, and our discography. It places the band in the context of the rest of the world as if weâre listening to everything that came before. It touches on all the themes of the previous songs, but there are also callbacks to songs from earlier in our career. But in this song, theyâre the object, not the subjectâIâm talking about a world in which these things happen, not talking about these things happening.â
âThe idea of that song seemed easy enough,â adds guitarist Chris Teti, âbecause we thought weâd just have to play the same thing over and over again for a kind of Explosions In The Sky-type effect. But it was incredibly difficult to make a vocal work over it, and it took a long time. We did the entirety of our previous LP in about three weeks, and we spent at least a couple weeks just on that one song. It was a crazy endeavor.â
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the bandâcompleted by Steven K. Buttery (drums and percussion), Joshua Cyr (bass/vocals), and Katie Dvorak (vocals/synth)âhad nothing but time to realize the full extent of their musical and thematic aspirations. And so, four years on from lauded third album Always Foreign, they were able to make what is undoubtedly the bandâs most ambitious and epic record to date. Written and recorded remotelyâa first for the bandâIllusory Walls takes on the weight of human existence while itâs buckling under the pressure of todayâs near-dystopian society. Personal anxieties and political struggles collide with a series of portentous, apocalyptic, and dramatic tunes, resulting in some of the darkest music the band has made since forming in 2009.
âThe world kind of felt like an apocalypse at the time,â remembers Teti, who produced the bandâs first three records, and co-produced this one with his studio partner Greg Thomas (END, Misery Signals). âI also wanted to make everything feel bigger and more fucked up. We didnât go as extreme as we could have on the previous record musically, so this time I was like, âWell, if this partâs going to be heavy, itâs got to be fucking heavy.â I felt previously we were in this weird middle ground where we didnât seize it. This time we did.â
Thatâs an understatement. Whereas normally the band would convene for two to three weeks at Tetiâs Silver Bullet Studios, the process for Illusory Walls took about a year. On the one hand, that made for a more relaxed, comfortable experience in the studio, allowing them to realize the full sonic potential of these songs by adding stringsâoverseen by Thomasâto the equation. But it also let them deal better with obstacles that came their way. One such hurdle was Dvorak sustaining an injury that meant she was unable to sing or talk for a couple of months towards the end of 2020. Had they been on a normal recording schedule, she wouldnât have been able to get her vocals done. Instead, she was able to channel what happened into her songs. âQueen Sophie For Presidentâ, for example, is ostensibly about the tenacity of oppression, whether on a personal or political level, but is heavily influenced by her injury.
Elsewhere, the ominous âDied In The Prison Of The Holy Officeâ is a scathing indictment of the Catholic Church, âBlank // Droneâ and âBlank // Workerâ are takedowns of how capitalism and government corruption both kill people for profitâsomething revisited in âFewer Afraidâ and its references to the Sago Mine disasterâwhile the mournful, delicate âInfinite Joshâ sees Bello ruminate on his uncleâs dementia. A callback (and sequel of sorts) to Always Foreignâs closer âInfinite Steveâ, it also finds Bello reckoning with the idea that he may also get it.
âI have this fear that itâs going to happen to me,â he says. âIt probably is happening to me a little bit. It almost feels like it, because during quarantine I was forgetting what day it is, forgetting how to talk to strangers, forgetting so many different pieces of life that felt fundamental to existence. I definitely looked at this as what âInfinite Steveâ would be with the pauses, confusion and sadness at loss of memory, and loss in general.â
Writing about it was, he says, a heavy burden to bear, but as with the rest of this recordâdespite its fateful, doom-laden atmosphereâthereâs nevertheless a glimmer of hope present.
âI try to find optimism in most things,â he continues, âeven government ineptitude or mining disasters. I followed up the Sago references with an image of trailer park labs that arenât doing what you think theyâre doingâtheyâre making insulin because they canât afford it. Iâm just trying to find an overall optimistic look at a dystopian situation, and with âInfinite Joshâ I focused on the good things that are happening so that when I do start to forget things itâll be the good things that I remember. That way itâs not so heartbreaking for me to think about.â
Itâs just one startlingly moving facet of a deeply complex, richly developed, and all-encompassing record, one thatâs full of (hyper-)specific references that are also wholly relatable. For while Illusory Walls certainly draws you deep into the world of the band, it also takes you deeper into your own, into crevices of your mind and life that you perhaps hadnât encountered or werenât able to explore before. To some extent, thatâs the crux of this album, and also its title. Taken from the unlikely source of the Dark Souls video game, Illusory Walls, explains Bello, ârefers to a hidden surface that seems to prevent entry, but upon inspection is nothing more than a visual illusion.â
That extends to many of the themes on the record, but also to the making of the album itself. Because while TWIABP have assumed what Teti calls âthe line-up thatâs going to go to the end of our livesâ, it certainly took breaking through a few of those illusory walls to get there.
âThis album feels like a rebirth,â he says. âI didnât want to just flatline the band. With the previous record, I feel we were kind of just coasting along, so my view for this was that shit had to change. Otherwise, whatâs the point? We needed to get something out of it artistically to be happy with it. So I kind of viewed this record as a make or break. If I wasnât confident in it at the end and it didnât shake up something with the band musically, there was no point. At first, I thought that was going to be really hard, but really, that was just this invisible hurdle. I realized we could do whatever the fuck we wanted. So we did.â
Track Listing:
01. Afraid to Die
02. Queen Sophie for President
03. Invading the World of the Guilty as a Spirit of Vengeance
04. Blank // Drone
05. We Saw Birds through the Hole in the Ceiling
06. Died in the Prison of the Holy Office
07. Your Brain is a Rubbermaid
08. Blank // Worker
09. Trouble
10. Infinite Josh
11. Fewer Afraid












