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- Summary: The third full-length release from Darkside sees Nicolás Jaar and Dave Harrington adding Tlacael Esparza as its official third member.
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- Record Label: Matador
- Genre(s): Electronic
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Score distribution:
- Positive: 6 out of 7
- Mixed: 1 out of 7
- Negative: 0 out of 7
- Feb 28, 2025An album almost bursting with ideas and one that, given the time, you’ll want to live with for months to come. The best album from Darkside to date.
- Feb 27, 2025Nothing remains a heady listen, but there’s an embodied immediacy that’ll make it easy to return to when the sun hits our skin again.
- Mar 7, 2025Nothing is another manifestation of Jaar and Harrington’s efforts to preserve a harmonious fusion of rock and electronics, without compromising either side.
- Feb 28, 2025This isn’t an album about clearing one’s mind. It’s raw and frenetic, a blistering and desperately beautiful soundtrack to the mounting chaos.
- UncutFeb 27, 2025Darkside opens up on Nothing with a playfully weird set of baroque pop that takes in bluesy '70s skanking and cavernous grooves. [Mar 2025, p.31]
- Feb 27, 2025The inclusion of dynamic percussion, as well as Darkside's openness, beckons music that is more kinetic, haphazard and melodic than anything the group has made before. .... Although it's hard not to miss the eerie glitchiness and endless meandering that made Psychic so explorable and viscerally unsettling, Nothing can be unnerving in its own way.
- MojoFeb 27, 2025There's a formlessness to the greater endeavour that ensures it's somehow less than its constituent parts. Still, the likes of subterranean Latin shuffle American Reference possess an invention and mystery that makes this an endlessly fascinating place to get lost. [Apr 2025, p.84]