Album artwork for What Went Down by Foals

After three critically acclaimed Top 10 albums, a succession of major awards and a growing list of festival headline sets, Foals reach bold new heights with the release of their eagerly anticipated new album What Went Down. Produced by James Ford (Arctic Monkeys, Florence and the Machine), What Went Down is an album that grapples with questions that are a world away from the bland bleatings of homogenised pop: permanence and impermanence; life and death; solitude; vulnerability; intimacy; passion; rage; humanity - weighty issues that make demands of the people creating that music, and of all those who listen to it, too. Sonically, it's an album that precariously seesaws between primal aggression and naked vulnerability. It's an approach that delivers a contrast of muscular shocks with the fiery central riff of Snake Oil and the menacing percussive march of Albatross set against some of the band's most openly experimentally moments to date such as cocktail of afrobeat and drum machines that underpins Night Swimmers and the stripped-back, vocal-led Give It All.

Foals

What Went Down

Warner
Album artwork for What Went Down by Foals
LP

£37.99

Released 28/08/2015Catalogue Number

0825646075034

Learn more
Album artwork for What Went Down by Foals
CD

£6.99

Released 28/08/2015Catalogue Number

0825646075010

Learn more
Foals

What Went Down

Warner
Album artwork for What Went Down by Foals
LP

£37.99

Released 28/08/2015Catalogue Number

0825646075034

Learn more
Album artwork for What Went Down by Foals
CD

£6.99

Released 28/08/2015Catalogue Number

0825646075010

Learn more

After three critically acclaimed Top 10 albums, a succession of major awards and a growing list of festival headline sets, Foals reach bold new heights with the release of their eagerly anticipated new album What Went Down. Produced by James Ford (Arctic Monkeys, Florence and the Machine), What Went Down is an album that grapples with questions that are a world away from the bland bleatings of homogenised pop: permanence and impermanence; life and death; solitude; vulnerability; intimacy; passion; rage; humanity - weighty issues that make demands of the people creating that music, and of all those who listen to it, too. Sonically, it's an album that precariously seesaws between primal aggression and naked vulnerability. It's an approach that delivers a contrast of muscular shocks with the fiery central riff of Snake Oil and the menacing percussive march of Albatross set against some of the band's most openly experimentally moments to date such as cocktail of afrobeat and drum machines that underpins Night Swimmers and the stripped-back, vocal-led Give It All.