There's No Future In Optimism

Album: Let All That We Imagine Be the Light (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "There's No Future in Optimism" is a politically tinged, emotionally charged, electronic-rock stomp of a song that pulses with defiance and hope.

    The band suggested the title to Garbage lead singer Shirley Manson, and she fell for it instantly. But instead of writing a dirge about doomscrolling and climate anxiety, Manson flipped the idea on its head, "because if we allow our fatalism or our negativity to really take over, we will crumble," she explained.
  • The opening lines, "If you're ready for love, if you're ready for love," repeat like a mantra, highlighting how the track is a challenge rather than a warning.

    For her own sanity, Manson is trying to hold on to hope and searching for softness in hard times. "I have had to ignite some positivity in my own mind, otherwise I wouldn't get out of bed," she told the Independent.
  • The song was born in the aftermath of George Floyd's murder and the civil unrest that followed. "It was terrifying," Shirley Manson said, recalling the weeks of helicopters circling above her home in Los Angeles, a time when the city felt like it might burst into flames - or simply unravel.

    The first verse paints an apocalyptic scene, "a city on fire," much like the band's 2017 track "No Horses," but this time it's grounded in very real and recent trauma. "It's about a city, in my case, Los Angeles, but it could be anywhere where bad stuff is happening," Manson said.
  • "There's No Future in Optimism" opens Garbage's eighth album, Let All That We Imagine Be the Light. Manson insisted the song start the album because she saw it as a statement of intent. "It's pretty much a rallying cry to all likeminded people," said Manson. "If you are interested in meeting this world with love, if you are willing to invest in tenderness and not violence or hate, then we are with you. You should come with us."
  • Directed by Benjy Kirkman, the cinematic black-and-white video stars actors Aderayo Adenekan and Michaela Madziova. Cities burn, systems collapse, but somewhere in the rubble there's still a glimmer of connection and, yep, optimism.
  • All That We Imagine Be The Light was recorded at Red Razor Sounds in Los Angeles, Garbage Butch Vig's studio Grunge Is Dead, and in Shirley Manson's bedroom. The production was handled by the band and Manson's husband, Billy Bush.

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