Nation of Language

Nation of Language

SWX 2, 15 Nelson Street, BS12JY Bristol Kort

mið. 26.08.2026 19:00

FORM Presents 

Nation of Language

Plus Special Guests Friko

Three years on from the release of their unexpectedly self-assured debut album Nation of

Language have attracted a rapidly growing, international audience via their danceable and

impassioned take on new wave and post-punk traditions. Their hopeful music—marked by

soaring melodies, blinking synth lines, and frontman Ian Devaney’s towering voice—is a ray of

light in an era of anxiety, cynicism, hatred, and snark. A fervent sound has continued to evolve

across two subsequent albums, but the common denominator is an unmistakable quality of

movement: the pulse from their keyboards is heady and propulsive, and their lyrics teem with

the restlessness and romanticism intrinsic to life in concrete jungles. The trio’s bustling Brooklyn

home has continued to serve as a backdrop to their creativity, the end product permeating with

an urgency to embrace progress, exploration, and forward motion.

Those who have seen Nation of Language perform have witnessed Ian Devaney, Aidan Noell,

and Alex MacKay bounce around the stage with seemingly endless energy as they dot the

globe. These days, they’re packing venues with increasing frequency throughout the year, and

becoming mainstays of massive summer music events such as Governors Ball, Austin City

Limits, Desert Daze, Pitchfork Festival, Primavera Sound and Outside Lands. Following the

critical acclaim of both their 2020 debut album Introduction, Presence and its 2021 follow-up A

Way Forward, the band have made their late-night TV debut on The Late Show with Stephen

Colbert last year, and now head into their next chapter.

Nation of Language’s forthcoming third album Strange Disciple fits neatly into this theory of

motion. Devaney has come to view this first trio of LPs as a sort of triptych, with each album

relating to differing modes of transportation. He imagines the first (Introduction, Presence) takes

place in a car, with a blurry euphoria reminiscent of road trips and song titles like “Automobile”

and “The Motorist.” The follow up (A Way Forward) occurs on (and as) a locomotive, influenced

by the minimal chug of krautrock. So it’s only fitting that their latest full-length Strange Disciple is

their wayfarer album, best experienced with one’s own two-feet on the ground and informed by

walks through various cities while on tour or within their home base of New York City.

Also new to their creative process, live shows have begun to play an important role in the

formation of this new set of songs, as the band was able to see the drastic range of audience

reaction to their music firsthand from their first waves of on-again/off-again pandemic era

touring. ““Suddenly in 2021 to our surprise the rooms were full of people,” Devaney says “and

roughly half of those showing up wanted to dance while the other half wanted to cry. It’s a bit of

a tightrope act to satisfy both feelings at once, but the most beautiful thing in the world to us is

that all parties made the perfect amount of space for one another to be able do whichever felt

right to them. To be able to keep the live environment palatable to both groups has become the

goal moving forward". As they prepare to play for as many people as possible in the year

ahead, their swift rise is still something they’re getting used to. As Devaney elaborates, “Other

than on a hyper-local level, for a number of years we were such an unknown band that being

unknown naturally became our default mental setting. This time around, I’m told repeatedly that

there’s people waiting to both hear and see the new music... and yet I still can’t quite grasp the

concept that either one is true. I see the dates on the calendar and at times it feels like it must

be somebody else’s band” 

Strange Disciple was recorded in the East Williamsburg studio of producer Nick Millhiser (live

member of LCD Soundsystem and also one half of Holy Ghost!), with a commitment to keeping

the process as rooted in analog gear as possible and printing the tracks to tape. Leaning into a

world of limits and surprises—much like a live show—the process allowed the band to accept

imperfections and resist the inclination to overthink their songcraft.

The sonic direction of Strange Disciple was guided by the album’s lead single “Sole Obsession,”

as well as “Spare Me the Decision” and “Sightseer,” all loosely groove-driven songs that deviate

from the straightforward drive of A Way Forward. “The bass parts have more of a groove and a

bounce that signaled being on your feet and out on the street,” Devaney says. As their bass

lines became more playful and ambulatory, they also relied more on the electric guitar, which

had largely been a background element up until this point. Channeling their love of shoegaze,

the unhurried, distorted “Swimming in the Shallow Sea” is their most guitar-centric track yet,

“Surely I Can’t Wait” blossoms out of a crafty, circling guitar groove, and “Stumbling Still” sneaks

in some wah-wah guitar and live drums amidst its kraut-punk clamor. But perhaps the most

glaring strums on Strange Disciple come from the zany bass line of “Too Much Enough,” which

seductively contorts with a fun-loving wink during the song’s unforgettable chorus.

“Too Much Enough” planted another important seed in the album process—the song is about

watching the news on TV and the feeling of “taking in so much media that your brain goes into

constant outrage mode,” as Devaney explains. This song, along with “Sole Obsession”—a track

about an overzealous devotee from which the album gets its title—embody this record’s focus

on unhealthy infatuations and obsessions, or as Devaney puts it, “revelatory anguish.” Strange

Disciple’s album cover is a Christian Little painting of an absurd monk-like figure who’s in agony

and ecstasy over their dedication to something. In an age of stan culture and political

demagogues, not only is this theme a timely one, it also taps into something bigger—the idea

that feeling something is better than nothing, even if the source is damaging. “Sometimes when

I feel the most is when I feel hopelessly devoted to something or someone,” Devaney explains.

Most of Strange Disciple’s toxic infatuation manifests in relation to romance. Devaney drew

inspiration from Leonard Cohen’s ability to imbue love songs with dark twists of the knife,

resulting in these melodramatic—almost operatic—tales, which Devaney describes as a “quasi-

fictional amalgam.” “Weak In Your Light” opens the album with their most forthright and pure

admission of adoration to date, and as the LP progresses, the narrator fluctuates between

obsession and shame. But by the album’s closer “I Will Never Learn,” that narrator is fully

broken, having reached their wits’ end but still unable to free themselves, restarting the

addictive cycle from the top.

Strange Disciple is a spiritual, searching record, as we follow a bumpy journey of self-

exploration, stumbling on moments of clarity and wisdom and then getting tripped up again.

Ultimately, it suggests that we shouldn't shy away from the brief pain necessary to make much-

needed change in our lives, especially when it grants reprieve from longtime pain that we’ve

grown comfortable with. However, it doesn’t paint these ideas in matter-of-fact terms, instead

leaning on artful, transient vignettes of characters caught in the crosshairs of temptation, guilt,

and reverie, as their obsessions both fuel and eat away at them.

Strange Disciple is an invitation to both celebrate and mourn, find yourself and lose yourself,

reflect on one’s infatuations and perhaps even form new ones with these songs—as long as

you’re feeling and as long as you’re on the move, whether that’s physically, emotionally, or

mentally. After all, three albums deep, Nation of Language still have new horizons to explore,

and several cars, trains, and planes to catch.

Flytjendur

  • Nation of Language
    Nation of Language

    Listen to 'Strange Disciple' 🤝 tickets for tours on sale now // Live bookings: North + South America - tmany@teamwass.com // everywhere else - sarah.joy@atc-live.com

  • Friko
    Friko
    Friko, a trio that’s cemented itself as a stalwart in the Chicago music scene, is frontman Niko Kapetan, bassist Luke Stamos, and drummer Bailey Minzenberger. Praised by the Chicago Tribune as “perfect slices of indie-pop,” their music is complex and dynamic, flickering between explosive rock, chamber pop, and serene sonics. It becomes even more pronounced in their live performances, where a crowd frenzied by wailing guitars finds itself minutes later collectively holding its breath, enamored by hypnotic strings and Kapetan’s emotive vocals.