Nature Always Wins is the seventh studio album by English indie rock band Maxïmo Park. It was released on 26 February 2021 and reached number two on the UK Albums Chart, putting it level with Our Earthly Pleasures (2007) as the band's highest-charting album. The album was received positively by music critics, who compared it favourably to the band's early albums.[2][3][4][5]
Composition
The album was produced during the COVID-19 pandemic and was Maxïmo Park's first as a trio, following the departure of keyboardist Lukas Wooller. Wooller had moved to Australia with his wife.[6] The album was produced by Atlanta-based producer Ben H. Allen, who collaborated remotely with the Newcastle upon Tyne-based band during the pandemic.[7]
The track "Why Must a Building Burn" attacks the government response to the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017.[3] The song also references the band's former merchandiser Nick Alexander, who was killed in the Bataclan concert hall attack.[6] Tracks including "Versions of You", "Ardour" and "Baby, Sleep" were inspired by frontman Paul Smith's new responsibilities as a father.[6] "Ardour", a song about parenting, features Pauline Murray of the punk rock band Penetration. Maxïmo Park had long been friends with Murray, having rehearsed in a studio named Polestar that she owns.[8] Smith said that the name of the album came from a line of the final track "Child of the Flatlands", about nature slowly reclaiming the outskirts of a city. He said that recent natural disasters had taught him that humanity is at the mercy of nature.[7]
Review aggregatorMetacritic gives Nature Always Wins a score of 80/100 based on ten reviews from music critics, all of which were positive.[14] It is the band's highest-rated album on Metacritic, ahead of debut A Certain Trigger, which averaged 75/100 from 19 professional reviews in 2005.[16]
Heather Phares of AllMusic noted that the album moved away from the political themes of the band's three previous albums, instead having philosophical lyrics about relationships, similar to A Certain Trigger.[4] Damian Jones of NME praised the album, though he found "Why Must a Building Burn" to be "brutal but jarringly upbeat".[3] On No Ripcord, reviewer Juan Egardo Rodríguez considered it to be the band's best album since Quicken the Heart in 2009, and highlighted the track "All of Me", which he compared to "polar opposites" R.E.M. and Europe.[5] Robin Murray of Clash called it Maxïmo Park's best album for a decade, and noted how its political content was less overt than the preceding Risk to Exist (2017).[2]