There is an explosive exuberance at the heart of Enter Shikari’s superb seventh album. In the lead-up to release, the St Albans quartet opted not for a coy schedule of impossible-to-get-into secret shows, nor for a status-underlining run through the grand halls to which they’re now so deservedly accustomed, but instead a looping February/March/April triple-tour of some of the UK’s finest (relatively) intimate venues. As mind-boggling as that seemed on announcement, it makes far more sense when you hit ‘play’ on A Kiss For The Whole World: a record built for sweaty congress that argues (then twice underlines) there’s still beauty out there on our troubled planet.
From the moment the brassy intro and spring-loaded opening riff of the title-track storm through, there’s no fucking about here. That song references the melody from Beethoven’s Ode To Joy, but it’s eclipsed by the defiant, chaotic modernism of (pls) set me on fire. It Hurts turns the album’s clearest hint of melancholy on its head in a cathartic, dancefloor-destroying anthem for the ages.
2020’s Nothing Is True & Everything Is Possible is a crucial reference point. Firstly, in how it heightened the mega-vibrant sonic palette continued here. More pivotally, it laid out the mission-statement that AKFTWW is built upon. COVID might’ve curtailed Shikari’s victory lap last time out, and we’ve plunged deeper into conflict and climate crisis in the short time since, but to give up hope is to admit defeat and this emphatic flurry confirms they won’t be lying down any time soon.