Soft Play: Heavy Jelly review – songs of love, loss and leaking bin bags

Soft Play: Heavy Jelly review – songs of love, loss and leaking bin bags

(BMG)
The punk-metal duo formerly known as Slaves offer sandpaper vocals, spine-tingling lyrics and sharp satire on their fiery fourth album

The fourth album from Soft Play – Isaac Holman and Laurie Vincent’s punk duo, formerly known as Slaves – concludes with one of the most extraordinary tracks of the year. Over a tinny mandolin riff and doleful violin, Holman employs his most abrasive hardcore rasp to lay bare a mind bludgeoned by grief. Everything and Nothing’s juxtaposition of sweetly jangling instrumental with strained, sandpaper vocals is spine-tingling enough, but the lyrics make it a masterpiece. Name-checking a late friend – while also seemingly alluding to Vincent’s partner, who died of cancer in 2020 – the pair tangle mundanity with utter desolation (“white knuckles on the counter in the kitchen”) to create a singularly beautiful and arresting portrait of loss.

Amazingly, Heavy Jelly also features one of the funniest songs in recent memory. Punk’s Dead, the Kent outfit’s ingeniously arch retort to complaints about their name change – a decision they arrived at after accepting Slaves’ problematic baggage – quotes from internet whingers. “Come and get a load of these PC babies,” shrieks Holman, churning satire into catharsis, before delivering a comically sublime line about Johnny Rotten.

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