The 1975 Albums, Ranked
Photo by Samuel Bradley
Sixteen. Seventeen. Fifteen. Twenty-two. Eleven. (Just eleven.)
The first thing fans of The 1975 will notice about the band’s new album Being Funny in a Foreign Language is that it is (just) 11 tracks long. This is half as long as their sprawling 2020 album Notes on a Conditional Form and a full 26% shorter (thank u, percentagecalculator.net) than the next shortest entry in the band’s catalog, 2018’s A Brief Inquiry Into Online Relationships.
None of these numbers would mean much if they weren’t backed by the irrepressible ambition and audacity of The 1975, which formed among teenaged pals in the suburbs of Manchester, England, in 2002. Since their 2013 self-titled debut, the band have been trying on new styles—from pouty pop, sleek funk-rock and shoegaze to nihilist punk, gospel and electronic music—and over-stuffing their albums with little regard for convention or expectations. This can be a feature or a bug, depending on how you look at it, but one thing is for sure: The 1975’s catalog has some head-scratchers here and there, but they are far outweighed by brilliant moments created by a band who have never been afraid to go big.
With the release of Being Funny, however, The 1975 are reining things in, relatively speaking. There are no extended ambient passages here. No cinematic orchestral interludes. No spoken-word tracks. Just 11 solid and sophisticated pop-rock songs that seem to signal a new, more mature band, as voiced by frontman Matty Healy in “The 1975,” the album’s opening track: “I’m sorry about my 20s, I was learning the ropes / I had a tendency of thinking about it after I spoke.”
No need to apologize, Matty! That was fun back then. Now, with the arrival of Being Funny in a Foreign Language, it’s time to take stock of The 1975’s arc so far. Below is a ranking of all five of their full-lengths, from their embryonic debut to the grown-up new one.
5. Notes on a Conditional Form (2020)
Written on tour, recorded at a bunch of studios across the world, released at the start of the pandemic and never properly toured, Notes on a Conditional Form is The 1975 at their most wide-ranging, adventurous and incoherent, like a pan-genre playlist compiled by four late-twenty-somethings in the early 21st century. Here, the band lean into their interest in dance music, incorporating the syncopated rhythms and soulful vibes of U.K. garage and house music into “Yeah I Know,” “Frail State of Mind,” “I Think There’s Something You Should Know” and “Shiny Collarbones,” which features the voice of Jamaican dancehall singer Cutty Ranks. (These songs are some of the best electronic asides in The 1975’s catalog, and proof that Healy and drummer George Daniel could should start a side project focused on this stuff.) Notes also wanders through Refused-style punk (“People”), shimmering ’90s alt-rock (“Me & You Together Song”), loping twang (“Roadkill”), a song (“Tonight [I Wish I Was Your Boy]”) built on a Temptations sample and the sweetly earnest “Guys,” about being in a band together. This smorgasbord of sounds is interesting, and surely thrilling to big fans, but at 22 tracks long, Notes has more than its share of songs that get lost in the shuffle.
4. Being Funny in a Foreign Language (2022)
It is, of course, difficult to compare an album that has just come out against four that have had years to sink in, but here’s what we know: Being Funny is already being hailed as the band’s “least interesting album to think about, and their easiest to enjoy at face value,” and—finally!—a 1975 album “where every song is good.” Backhanded compliments aside, it is true that these 11 tracks are remarkably cohesive, and they capture a world-class pop-rock group happily exploring their most accessible groove. Songs like “Happiness” and “Oh Caroline” recall the I Like It When You Sleep era, while “About You” and “I’m In Love With You” feel more like The 1975’s more recent sophisti-pop singles. To keep things from getting just a little too polished, “Looking for Somebody to Love” sounds like an irresistible deep cut from the Footloose soundtrack splashed with a hint of noise, “The 1975” (the name of all their opening tracks) features hypnotizing, Steve Reich-ian piano and “Part of the Band” revolves around a cool staccato string arrangement. Being Funny is good. Time will tell just how good.