The Mad Stone

Album: Mountainhead (2023)
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Songfacts®:

  • "The Mad Stone" is a key track on Everything Everything's album Mountainhead. The album serves as a parable for modern society, particularly the relentless pursuit of a singular goal. The construction of a giant mountain represents capitalism and its social divisions.
  • The song follows a character enticed by the "Mad Stone," a place that seems to offer some kind of ultimate satisfaction. Lead singer Jonathan Higgs describes it to Apple Music as an argument between believers in this grand mountain project and those with doubts.
  • The post-chorus is a metaphorical mirror reflecting an endless image:

    At the very top there was a screen that showed a picture
    Of a man who stood there looking at a picture
    Of a man who stood there looking at a picture
    Of a picture of a man on a screen


    "I was trying to come up with a metaphor for an idea of something that would be an actual goal that someone might want to get to," said Higgs, "but it's also really obviously selfish and self- aggrandizing."
  • "The Mad Stone" is a collaborative effort, written by the band and produced by Everything Everything guitarist Alex Robertshaw and Tom A.D. Fuller under their joint alias, Kaines & Tom AD. The music is dynamic and complex, with lush orchestration and choral harmonies creating a sense of awe mixed with unease.

    "Alex created an orchestral accompaniment and we recorded a lot of group vocals to give it a kind municipal choral sound," said Higgs.
  • "The Mad Stone" sets the stage for the album's narrative, portraying a society perpetually building a mountain while enduring the consequences of "living in the resulting giant hole (quarry)."

    The initial concept for Mountainhead stemmed from Mark Fisher's book Capitalist Realism, which explores the pervasiveness of capitalism and its impact on individuals. "The human side is what really struck me and I felt compelled to write songs about it," Higgs told The Sun. "I think a lot of people experience that yearning feeling of loss and confusion but can't describe or escape it."

    "The idea was a good jumping off point. In order to build the huge mountain, there is an ever-growing hole that we must all live in," he added. "That felt like enough of a framework for me to hang stories and songs from."

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