No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Godspeed You! Black Emperor |
Cover: | Godspeed You Black Emperor No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead Cover.jpg |
Alt: | A beige-walled room in the Hotel2Tango studio, with a long table cluttered with equipment, a vintage mustard sofa, and cardboard taped to the wall with pink tape. |
Recorded: | 2024 |
Studio: | Hotel2Tango (Montreal) |
Genre: | Post-rock |
Label: | Constellation |
Producer: | Jace Lasek |
Prev Title: | G_d's Pee at State's End! |
Prev Year: | 2021 |
No Title as of 13 February 2024 28,340 Dead (stylized in all caps and with quotation marks) is the eighth studio album by Canadian post-rock band Godspeed You! Black Emperor, released on 4 October 2024 by Constellation Records. It follows their 2021 release G_d's Pee at State's End!, an was preceded by a single, as "Grey Rubble – Green Shoots" was released alongside the album's announcement on 27 August 2024.
The title refers to the reported number of Palestinian deaths by Israeli strikes between 7 October 2023 and 13 February 2024 during the Gaza genocide, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.[1] In a statement of the album announcement, the band proclaimed: "No Title= What gestures make sense while tiny bodies fall? What context? What broken melody? And then a tally and a date to mark a point on the line, the negative process, the growing pile".[2]
In February 2024, the band premiered three new songs at the Knockdown Center in New York City.[3]
On 27 August 2024, while embarking on a North American tour, the band announced the album, releasing the single "Grey Rubble – Green Shoots",[4] which was engineered and mixed by Jace Lasek and mastered by Harris Newman,[5] along with additional 2025 tour dates in North America and Europe.[6]
According to the review aggregator Metacritic, the album has a weighted average score of 77 out of 100 from 7 critic scores, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.
Far Out named the album their album of the week, calling it "a politically charged masterpiece". Slant Magazine gave the album 3 out of 5 stars and said "Godspeed’s adherence to formula undercuts the visceral punch that, for decades, has been central to their appeal". The Guardian called the release "powerfully brilliant" and said the band "have made an urgent soundtrack for an uncertain and dangerous world". BrooklynVegan said the album "has the raw urgency of an album that came together quickly and intuitively, as both a response and a soundtrack to ongoing mass tragedy, and it’s as overpowering as any of Godspeed’s best records".[7] The Skinny described the album as "the embodiment of music as art", noting its warped, noisy instrumentation. The review highlighted the band's departure from corporate influence, traditional song structures, and algorithmically driven track lengths, allowing Godspeed You! Black Emperor to deliver an uncompromised message.
Vinyl edition-exclusive bonus trackNotes
Adapted from the liner notes on Bandcamp[8]