Nick Cave & Warren Ellis: Seven Psalms review – intimate prayers of extreme power

(Cave Things)
Backed by reverberant synths and piano, Cave wrestles with faith and civil unrest in this powerful 25-minute release

Two years ago, at the height of lockdown, a fan wrote to Nick Cave’s Red Hand Files website asking his opinions about prayer. As usual on a website where anyone is invited to ask Cave anything, his answer was long and thoughtful. “Prayer is not dependent on the existence of a subject,” he said. “You need not pray to anyone. It is just as valuable to pray into your disbelief, as it is to pray into your belief, for prayer is not an encounter with an external agent, rather it is an encounter with oneself.”

Clearly, this was a topic that exercised Cave during the pandemic: Seven Psalms features seven prayers, written in 2020, with a musical accompaniment by his chief collaborator, Warren Ellis. Releasing something like this would count as a dramatically leftfield turn for most major alt-rock artists, but then Cave has hardly shied away from the complex issue of faith. His changing thoughts about God are a kind of connective tissue that runs throughout his body of work.

His twentysomething obsession with what he called the “manic, punitive God” of the Old Testament informed the Birthday Party’s Mutiny in Heaven, with its chaotic conflation of heroin addiction, absolution and fallen angels, and 1985’s Tupelo, a recasting of Elvis Presley’s birth as a cross between an apocalyptic event and the nativity. His later discovery of the gospel of St Mark – where, he said, he saw Christ depicted “in a wilderness of the soul … consumed by frustration and anger”, at odds with “the wet, all-loving, etiolated individual” of his “decaf” Anglican upbringing – seemed to underpin 1997’s The Boatman’s Call, an album that found Cave writhing around in romantic and spiritual agony. More recently, the approach to faith he has expressed both in The Red Hand Files and his Conversations With Nick Cave tour helped fuel Ghosteen, arguably the greatest work of his career and inarguably an album of extraordinary emotional depth and power.

By comparison with Ghosteen, Seven Psalms is a minor release: 25 minutes long – with half of that consumed by an instrumental version of the seven short tracks on side one – and offered for sale alongside the pencils, greetings cards, and a jumper for small dogs bearing the legend Suck My Dick on Cave’s merchandise website Cave Things. It feels a little like an addendum to last year’s Carnage, which was also born out of lockdown and featured vocals that came close to spoken word, Cave incanting his lyrics as much as singing them against Ellis’s constantly shifting backdrops.

Seven Psalms takes that aspect of Carnage’s approach to an extreme. Cave talks, Ellis provides understated washes of synthesiser, piano and largely wordless vocals. Everything is drenched in reverb except Cave’s voice. Not unexpectedly, the mood is stripped of Cave’s propensity for wordplay and beautifully timed jokes. There’s certainly some vivid imagery, not least Such Things Should Never Happen’s depiction of a bird dying and a mother crying “beside a little box” – but nothing remotely like the line from Carnage about being “a Botticelli Venus with a penis”.

The words deal with loss, forgiveness and, frequently, the aforementioned idea of praying into your disbelief. On I Have Trembled My Way Deep and How Long Have I Waited?, Cave asks for a sign – “I have stood at the threshold of your wonder, bid me enter” – while Ellis’s music, which can occasionally rise to triumphant crescendos, turns darkly atmospheric, as if underlining the sense of uncertainty. Sometimes, you get the feeling that current events may have intruded on Cave’s thoughts. It isn’t a stretch to imagine Splendour, Glorious Splendour as giving thanks for civil unrest, perhaps (given when the words were written) the civil unrest that erupted following the murder of George Floyd: “The world explodes amazing at your hand … a gas canister spins, hissing through the street”. Meanwhile, if it’s tempting to say that this is Cave at his most personal, declining to lurk behind invented characters, it’s equally tempting to wonder if the narrator pleading for forgiveness on Have Mercy on Me is necessarily its author: “I have dashed the newborn dead upon the rocks, plagued the cities, thrown families to the cold, turned backwards all the advancing clocks”.

It’s an extremely powerful album – Cave and Ellis are superb writers, at the top of their game – even if you wonder how often you’ll listen to it, or indeed, what one quite vocal section of his fanbase will make of it: “For fuck’s sake, enough of the God and Jesus bullshit!” as one Red Hand Files correspondent protested last month. Cave answered that complaint thoughtfully and at length, with the calmness of an artist who must have known for some time that he’s out on his own, occupying an entirely unique space, doing things no one else does.

This week Alexis listened to

Metronomy – The Look
A fabulous Saturday afternoon Glastonbury performance by Metronomy sent me back to their breakthrough album The English Riviera on the way home. It still sounds fantastic.

• This review was updated on 30 June with a correction: Cave read the gospel of St Mark, not St Matthew.

Contributor

Alexis Petridis

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Nick Cave and Warren Ellis: Carnage review – vivid visions of apocalypse and absolution
Cave’s rich writing and Ellis’s dense beat-free sounds form a reliably vivid picture of locked-down end-times and the fantasy of redemption

Alexis Petridis

25, Feb, 2021 @1:00 PM

Article image
Nick Cave: Seven Psalms review – yearning for mercy and grace
Cave’s grief continues in spoken-word form, with lovesick prayers – and glimmers of respite

Kitty Empire

03, Jul, 2022 @8:00 AM

Article image
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds: Skeleton Tree review – brilliant music on the verge of collapse
The band’s misunderstood new album has an eerie and apparently premonitory power

Alexis Petridis

15, Sep, 2016 @2:00 PM

Article image
Mitski: The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We review – a songwriter with stunning melodic power
Playing country-inflected orchestral pop with sardonic wit and deep feeling, Mitski underlines why she’s one of the very best singer-songwriters working today

Alexis Petridis

14, Sep, 2023 @11:00 AM

Article image
Ed Sheeran: Subtract review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
Grief and his wife’s brush with cancer inspired Sheeran to make this insular record with Aaron Dessner of the National. It’s downcast yet full of new ideas – but will fans take to it?

Alexis Petridis

04, May, 2023 @11:01 PM

Article image
Wilco: Cousin review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
Jeff Tweedy and co’s 13th album bears a close family resemblance to Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, but with Cate Le Bon in the producer’s chair, it has an appealing wash of left-field weirdness and its lyrics express an older man’s anxieties

Alexis Petridis

28, Sep, 2023 @11:00 AM

Article image
SG Lewis: Times review – soaring, subtle disco for kitchen dancefloors
Given the British producer’s skill for emotionally attuned nightclub elation, his debut shouldn’t suffer from the shutdown of its natural habitat

Alexis Petridis

18, Feb, 2021 @12:00 PM

Article image
Kenny Beats: Louie review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
The hip-hop producer’s debut album is affectionately infused with the spirit of his father’s mixtape introductions, along with good splash of obscure 70s soul

Alexis Petridis

26, Aug, 2022 @7:40 AM

Article image
Paramore: This Is Why review – deft songs of millennial malaise
The pop-punk band have progressed from teenage bile to thirtysomething angst, expressed with agitated drumming, angular guitars, big riffs and heartfelt lyrics

Alexis Petridis

10, Feb, 2023 @12:04 AM

Article image
Ed Sheeran: = review – calculated, craven, corny … or brilliantly crafted?
One of the world’s biggest pop stars only slightly tweaks the formula for an album that many will already have decided they either love or hate

Alexis Petridis

28, Oct, 2021 @11:01 PM