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22 years after their first release and 10 years after their last album, Nebula are back. And you’re thinking “Holy shit!” right now, you pretty much nailed it.
Holy Shit is Nebula’s first LP since 2009’s Heavy Psych, and it quickly puts to rest the question that’s loomed since guitarist/vocalist Eddie Glass, bassist Tom Davies and drummer Michael Amster announced the band’s reformation in 2017. Nebula are still Nebula.
It’s there in the inimitable space-grunge of ‘It’s all Over’, or the take-a-drag-and-be-gone ‘Let’s Get Lost’, or the way ‘Tomorrow Never Comes’ manages to be so, so heavy and laid back at the same time. It’s in the paradise-psych of ‘Gates of Eden’ and even the snoring you hear before the devilish ‘Man’s Best Friend’ kicks in to open the album (the studio couch became a crash spot).
Since the days of 1998’s Let it Burn EP and the now-classic To the Center debut album, Nebula have always been just a little more dangerous. Just a little more unhinged. Holy Shit shows this front-to-back for the essential part of their character it is, and yet it’s not trying to be anything they’ve done before, whether it’s those early outings or Heavy Psych or Charged (2001), Apollo (2003) or Atomic Ritual (2005). It’s a sixth Nebula album — something for which even the most ardent of fans could hardly have hoped.
Holy Shit will be released on June 7th through Heavy Psych Sounds (pre-order here). Listen to the track ‘Witching Hour’ below. Tom Davies (drums) comments: “Witching hour is about that magical time of night when the dark is at its darkest and the moon is big, bold and bright and the general populous is tucked up in bed oblivious to the shenanigans of the marginalised going on all around them.”