After two straight reviews of disappointing albums I feel the need
for a win. This next record isn’t the best by this band but did was it good
enough to provide that win?
Disc 1935 is…The Demise of Planet X
Artist: Sleaford Mods
Year of Release: 2026
What’s up with the Cover? Jason Williamson and Andrew Fearn, aka the Sleaford Mods, sit in what appears to be an astral vortex of some kind.
Or maybe the pressure of their dope beats is so great that we can literally see the thump coming off the sub-woofer.
How I Came To Know It: My friend Nick introduced me to the Sleaford Mods way back, but only in recent years have I been buying their albums. “The Demise of Planet X” was just me buying their latest record when it came out.
How It Stacks Up: I have 5 Sleaford Mods albums as well as one compilation record (which doesn’t count in this column, but that I’m mentioning for general interest. “The Demise of Planet X” is a solid record, but competition among Sleaford Mods records is intense and I must put it at #4.
Ratings: 3 stars but almost 4
The Sleaford Mods has a simple formula. Jason Williamson’s visceral rant/rap lyrics and Andrew Fearn’s dope beats. That’s all it is and that’s all you need. Like all the records before it, “The Demise of Planet X” is a slap in the face, waking up listeners to the various grievances the Sleaford Mods have towards society, and the various people that contribute to its collapse. Heavy topics delivered with a funky beat that help it go down easier.
Before you start your exploration of the Mods, you should be warned that they swear. A lot. Jason Williamson has a potty mouth that is so dirty it is hard to put into words. Of course, that’s exactly what he does. And he doesn’t just throw out swear words in an offhanded way, he uses them as deliberate weapons, aggressively firing them with furious precision. They are the instruments through which he imparts his ire and disappointment, delivered like hammer blows to knock down the walls of your propriety.
“The Good Life” opens the record with a bang, and probably Andrew Fearn’s best effort on the “sick beats” front. This song is as musical as the Sleaford Mods get, lifted by a melodic refrain of “I can see a phantom” delivered by the band Big Special. Williamson isn’t one for singing a melody, but adding one in here gives the Mods an extra layer of interest I wasn’t expecting.
Halfway through the song, actress Gwendoline Christie comes along to let us know that in addition to playing knights and stormtroopers in TV and film, she’s also got a whole lot of anger to share. She absorbs all of Williamson’s vitriol and delivers a few bars of “take that” that match his ferocity, swear for swear. No mean feat, and well handled.
The record is a worthy entry into the band’s already impressive discography, although this many records in there was less of the “holy shit, did he say that?” experience that I had when I first heard them. That’s no shade on the band, that’s just that I now know in advance what I’m getting with a Sleaford Mods album. It is hard to stay at that level of maximum outrage across multiple albums without the listener’s system getting a bit inured to it.
I would also note that while Fearn is the best composer of dope beats this side of Run the Jewels, it meant that I came into the record with high expectations. There are some particularly good ones on “The Demise of Planet X” but on the whole, earlier records are more consistently excellent. Again, no shade, just the challenge of coming in with a catalogue of work that sets a very high bar.
Subject-matter wise, Williamson treads well-worn ground from earlier records. Society’s ills are on full display, with the wealthy getting wealthier and upper class twits of the year fully in the crosshairs. He also loves to call out individuals that have irritated him, sometimes for their music, sometimes for reasons I wasn’t entirely clear about on my quick skate. We know he’s mad though, with his spitting fiery rap style and all those swears. So many swears.
There are songs calling out consumer culture. “The Unwrap” may be the darkest exploration of retail therapy I’ve ever heard. Buy stuff to fill the hole in your culture. As someone who literally writes a column about all the records I buy this one hit home exactly the way the band intended it to.
There are also tales of youthful trauma, notably “Gina Was” a song that tells the tale of being betrayed by a girl, having your pants pulled down and then ridiculed for the revealed…er…shortcomings. Ha ha ha and all that, but the song is decidedly not funny and a reminder a nasty prank amongst kids can ripple through life for years after.
In this way, this is classic Sleaford Mods fare. Songs with a funky beat that make you bob your head, and spittle-filled ire that gives voice to the frustrated and disenfranchised. Take it just at that level and swear along or dive a level deeper and explore the damage done to the spirit underneath. Heavy stuff, with a head bobbing groove to give you something to celebrate among the devastation.
Best tracks: The Good Life, Double Diamond, Elitest G.O.A.T., Don Draper, Gina Was, Flood the Zone, the Unwrap
