Is This the Life We Really Want? is the fourth solo album by the English rock musician Roger Waters, released on 2 June 2017 by Columbia Records. It was produced by Nigel Godrich, who urged Waters to make a more concise, less theatrical album. It was Waters' first solo album since Amused to Death (1992), and his first studio work since the opera Ça Ira (2005).
The album reached number three in the UK and number 11 in the United States. It produced four singles: "Smell the Roses", "Déjà Vu", "The Last Refugee" and "Wait for Her".
Recording
Is This the Life We Really Want? was recorded in Los Angeles and London.[3] It was produced by the Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich, who met Waters when he produced the 2015 live album Roger Waters: The Wall.[3] Though Waters had not heard Godrich's work with Radiohead, they got on well and discussed working together.[3] Godrich, a fan of Waters' work with Pink Floyd, was frank with Waters, telling him he found some of his solo work "unlistenable". However, he was reassured that Waters "really still had it" after hearing his demo of "Déjà Vu".[4]
Godrich wanted to create a pared-back album to showcase Waters "the poet".[4] He felt Waters' creativity had been invigorated by the WallLive tour, and that his role as producer was "to push him a little bit".[4] He encouraged Waters to make a concise record, reminding him that Pink Floyd's 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon is only 43 minutes long.[3] Unlike most of Waters' work, Waters did not co-produce the record; he said: "[Godrich] did a brilliant job ... I sat on my hands with lips zipped. You've rented this dog, let it work."[5] Godrich used tape loops and found sounds extensively to create segues between tracks. He is also credited for arrangement, sound collages, keyboards, guitar, and mixing.[6]
Themes
Waters initially planned to record a concept album;[7] he conceived a radio play about a man and his granddaughter investigating why children are being killed in other parts of the world.[7] He described the play as "part magic carpet ride, part political rant, part anguish", and said it featured about a dozen songs.[3] Godrich persuaded Waters to abandon the theatrical elements and create a "less linear" work.[7] Waters said he planned to produce the original idea in the future.[7]
The concerns I have with that central question – "Why are we killing the children?" – are still there. I'm still deeply concerned that we're killing children all over the world with hardly a second thought because we've become so insensitive to the idea of every time the curtain falls on some forgotten life, it is because we stood by silent and indifferent – it's normal. I'm quoting from the record now. And unfortunately, it has become normal; we have normalized the death of the innocent.
Waters also said the album had been influenced by having fallen in love:[3]
The record is really about love – which is what all of my records have been about, in fact ... It's also the question of how do we take these moments of love – if we are granted any in our lives – and allow that love to shine on the rest of existence, on others.
The album also contains lyrics criticizing then-US President Donald Trump and his administration, as well as samples of Trump speaking.[8][9] Matilda Berke of Atwood Magazine noted that, "Upon closer inspection, however, it becomes clear that Waters has larger targets than a single orange-haired demagogue. [...] Apathy, it seems, is Roger Waters' primary foe."[9]
Release
Is This the Life We Really Want? was released on 2 June 2017 by Columbia Records.[10] It was Waters' first solo album since Amused to Death (1992).[11] The album peaked at number 3 in the United Kingdom and number 11 in the United States before falling off the US charts in four weeks. It produced four singles: "Smell the Roses" released on 20 April, "Déjà Vu" released on 8 May, "The Last Refugee" released on 19 May and "Wait for Her" released on 19 July in 2017. The album was blocked from release in Italy after the artist Emilio Isgrò alleged that the cover art plagiarised his work.[12]
At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, the album received an average score of 72, based on 16 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[13]Rolling Stone said: "The music is quintessential post-Dark Side Of The Moon Floyd, but channeled by offspring: producer Nigel Godrich brings prog-rock grandeur, multi-instrumentalist Jonathan Wilson microdose psychedelia, Luciusalt-R&B backing vocals."[21]Drowned in Sound said the album is "a long, sprawling epic that stretches out for its slightly-padded running time, but one so full of ideas and intricacies that it's an easy album to get sucked into."[16]
Consequence of Sound said the album "is easily the most accessible of Waters' solo work—a distillation in many regards of the anti-fascist, anti-imperialist, anti-greed messages he's been broadcasting since Pink Floyd".[15]Pitchfork said the "myriad sonic references to his work with Pink Floyd suggest that Waters is comfortable with his past. The more you accept how much his past reflects in his present, the more receptive you'll be to this album's charms."[20]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Roger Waters, except "Wait for Her", written by Waters & Mahmoud Darwish
^"Czech Albums – Top 100". ČNS IFPI. Note: On the chart page, select 23.Týden 2017 on the field besides the words "CZ – ALBUMS – TOP 100" to retrieve the correct chart. Retrieved 13 June 2017.