The Cureâs Robert Smith: âSinging new album live helps me grieveâ
The Cure frontman Robert Smith says performing songs from the bandâs newly-released album, Songs Of A Lost World, helped him deal with the grief of losing close family members in recent years.
Speaking to BBC Radio 6 Musicâs Huw Stephens, he said singing live became âhugely catharticâ in escaping the âdoom and gloomâ he felt.
âYou just suddenly feel something. You feel connection,â he added. âAnd thatâs the reason why I still do it⊠that communal moment with a crowd. Thereâs something really, really wonderful about it.â
The band performed a live session before also playing a Radio 2 In Concert set to a small audience at the BBC Radio Theatre on Wednesday.
The London show included a performance of Alone â the groupâs first new music in 16 years and the lead single from Songs Of A Lost World, released this Friday.
The long-awaited record is the follow-up to 2008âs 4:13 Dream and has been in production since 2019, following the bandâs 40th anniversary shows.
Smith expressed relief at finishing the process, telling Stephens that completing song lyrics he deems worthy has become more difficult with age.
âItâs the one thing that as Iâve grown older, Iâve found much much harder to do â write words that I want to sing. I can write words but I donât really feel like singing them.
âSo to arrive at that point where I think that itâs worth singing these songs, it has become really, really hard,â he said.
He revealed that his wife Mary, who he met at secondary school, helped him finalise the albumâs tracklist, insisting that he balance the depth of the darkness.
âI was finishing the doom and gloom ones⊠and [Mary] said no, no, no your best albums are the ones that just have a couple of⊠more upbeat tracks. She was right.
âI wanted to finish everything, because I thought thatâs only fair to all the songs, like theyâre all little children â I donât want to pick favourites.â
Originally formed in Crawley, West Sussex in 1978, The Cure continue to endure as alternative rockâs goth icons â pitching lyrics of love, angst and desolation against a kaleidoscope of melodies.
From early years of rock sparsity â pulling apart the remnants of Joy Divisionâs post-punk gloom and David Bowieâs Low era â they bloomed into late-80s indie-pop heavyweights â defined by Smithâs melancholy.
This era spawned a number of UK top 10 singles, including Lullaby and Friday Iâm In Love â one of the bandâs best-known tracks from their chart-topping 1992 album, Wish.
Guitarist and principal songwriter Smith remains the bandâs only constant member, closely followed by long-time bassist Simon Gallup.
Reeves Gabrels and Perry Bamote currently tour on guitar, with Jason Cooper on drums and Roger OâDonnell on keyboard.
But it is Smithâs imprint that dominates on Songs Of A Lost World â the bandâs 14th album.
Featuring songs written as far back as 2010, events of recent years have given it a personal feel, with Smith mourning the loss of family members, including his late brother, Richard.
His death inspired the track I Can Never Say Goodbye â a window into grief-stricken frustration and regret.
Allow Google YouTube content?
 andÂ
 before accepting. To view this content choose âaccept and continueâ.
When the track made its way into new songs included in last yearâs tour, Smith often had trouble completing it without becoming overwhelmed with emotion. He told Stephens that going on stage and singing the track ânight after nightâ eventually became a âwonderful momentâ.
Speaking to Matt Everitt in an interview for the latest issue of Uncut magazine, since published on the bandâs YouTube channel, Smith explained these real-life touchstones came to define the record and set it apart from earlier albums.
âWhen youâre younger, you romanticise [death], even without knowing it. Then it starts happening to your immediate family and friends and suddenly itâs a different thing,â he said.
âItâs something that I struggled with lyrically: how to put this into the songs? I feel like I am different person than I was when we last made an album. I wanted that to come through.â
This sense of fragility and awareness of mortality runs throughout, as Smith, now 65, faces the passage of time with newfound urgency.
Its darkness and atmospherics mirror 1982âs Pornography and 1989âs critically-acclaimed Disintergration. However, Songs Of A Lost World is much tighter in length, with only eight tracks â almost half the runtime of those albums.
Reviews from critics have been positive, hailing Songs Of A Lost World as a return to form.
The Telegraph awarded five stars, with Neil McCormick describing it as âperversely uplifting in its nihilism and the best thing since their debutâ. The Guardianâs four-star review praised the recordâs introspective depth, particularly how it wrestles with âthe question of Smithâs own selfhoodâ.
âIt seems to be fracturingâ, wrote Kitty Empire, despite fansâ supposed clear image of one of British rockâs iconic figures. She also highlighted the unexpected pop banger, Drone: Nodrone â one of Maryâs picks â as the albumâs âcrowning gloryâ.
These themes culminate on the albumâs closer, Endsong, an 11-minute epic that stood out as a highlight of the bandâs Radio 2 In Concert performance on Wednesday â broadcast on BBC Radio 2, iPlayer and BBC Two this Saturday.
Formed around a thudding, slow drum beat, the guitars build to a fully-formed crescendo of whirling tones and unrelenting bass hooks, similar to 1992âs Cut.
Lyrically it finds Smith looking back on his own life, âremembering the hopes and dreams I hadâ; wondering what happened to the âsmall boyâ, and how he âgot so oldâ.
Classic melancholy on paper perhaps, but live it sounds brutally honest, unapologetically raging and resigned in equal measure.
Elsewhere, the mood of the set was celebratory and very much alive: filled with fan favourites and greatest hits, from the languid heartbreak of Pictures of You to the poppier sounds of Inbetween Days and Just Like Heaven.
The band themselves also appeared in good spirits, exchanging smiles, with Smith playfully dancing around during the encore that included Close To Me and Lullaby.
Joy in the face of new material that, in places, sounds darker than ever should perhaps come as no surprise.
âIâve hated the idea of having a set time for a careerâ, Smith told the NME in 1983 as he turned 25. âI think itâs terrible. I suppose itâs because Iâm getting older and feeling my age.â
Smith recently suggested to The Times that the band may come to an end around their 50th anniversary in 2028, by which time he will be around 70.
Speaking to Stephens, he suggested, with a dry laugh, that heâs ânot going to getâ to that milestone age and would instead be âreally happyâ to see Christmas.
But Smith told Uncut that the band have three albums near-completion following their intensely productive 2019 recording sessions.
He adds to Stephens that heâs âalmost thereâ with the second album. âOnce Iâve done that, then I shall take a deep breath and then Iâll look up, but until I finish it Iâm not bothering about what comes next.â
Time waits for no-one, but Smith and The Cure are certainly not ready to stand still.
Set list
Radio 2 In Concert:
- Alone
- Pictures Of You
- A Fragile Thing
- High
- A Night Like This
- Lovesong
- The Walk
- Inbetween Days
- Just Like Heaven
- From The Edge Of The Deep Green Sea
- End Son
Encore
- Lullaby
- Friday Iâm In Love
- Close To Me
- Why Canât I Be You?
BBC Radio 6 Music session
- Plainsong
- Last Dance
- I Can Never Say Goodbye
- Burn
- And Nothing is Forever
- At Night
- A Forest
- All I Ever Am
- Prayers for Rain
- Disintegration