Notes on a Conditional Form

Notes on a Conditional Form
In a orange-brown color, text on the top from left to right in various fonts, "Music For Cars", "The 1975", "Notes On A Conditional Form", "DH00753", and on the top far right, letters "N" and "O" on top, "C" and "F" below, and in between and center, the letter "A".
Standard cover for physical releases
Studio album by
Released22 May 2020 (2020-05-22)
RecordedAugust 2018 – February 2020
Studio
  • Abbey Road (London, England)
  • Angelic (Halse, England)
  • British Grove (London)
  • Conway (Los Angeles, California)
  • EastWest (Los Angeles)
  • Lush (Brisbane, Australia)
  • E8 Hackney (London)
  • Nightbird (Los Angeles)
  • Perfect Sound (Los Angeles)
  • RAK (London)
  • Sleeper Sounds (London)
  • Sony (Sydney, Australia)
  • Storm Trooper Tour Bus (U.S.)
  • Strongroom (London)
  • The Church (London)
  • TIC (Vienna, Austria)
Genre
Length80:29
Label
Producer
The 1975 chronology
A Brief Inquiry into Online Relationships
(2018)
Notes on a Conditional Form
(2020)
Being Funny in a Foreign Language
(2022)
Alternative cover
Digital-only cover[1]
Singles from Notes on a Conditional Form
  1. "People"
    Released: 22 August 2019
  2. "Frail State of Mind"
    Released: 24 October 2019
  3. "Me & You Together Song"
    Released: 16 January 2020
  4. "The Birthday Party"
    Released: 19 February 2020
  5. "Jesus Christ 2005 God Bless America"
    Released: 3 April 2020
  6. "If You're Too Shy (Let Me Know)"
    Released: 23 April 2020
  7. "Guys"
    Released: 13 May 2020

Notes on a Conditional Form is the fourth studio album by English band the 1975. It was released on 22 May 2020 by Dirty Hit and Polydor Records. Initially titled Music for Cars, the album was intended as the follow-up to I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful yet So Unaware of It (2016). It later came to denote an era spanning two albums. The first, A Brief Inquiry into Online Relationships, was released in November 2018. The band recorded much of the second album in London, Los Angeles, Sydney, Northamptonshire and in a mobile studio on their tour bus. The album faced several delays and was submitted only weeks before the onset of the global COVID-19 pandemic.

A maximalist experimental album, Notes on a Conditional Form has a free-flowing structure composed of conventional songs, classical orchestral interludes and ambient electronic instrumentals. The album contains loose song structures characterised by their stream of consciousness deliveries, neo-noir ambience, downcast string arrangements, melancholic orchestral flourishes and sudden contrasts. Guest contributors to the album include Phoebe Bridgers, FKA Twigs, Cutty Ranks, climate change activist Greta Thunberg, and Matty Healy's father, Tim.

Notes on a Conditional Form incorporates numerous genres, combining house, UK garage and various electronic music subgenres with guitar-based acoustic folk, emo, country and multiple rock music subgenres. Thematically, the album focuses on the intricacies of human existence and uses introspection, retrospection, self-reflection and straightforward storytelling. It explores themes of isolation, uncertainty and anxiety, inspired by the 2017 documentary Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold and Bruce Springsteen's 1982 album Nebraska. The album's lyrics provide a deconstruction of Healy's extroverted persona, with several reviewers regarding it as the 1975's most personal record.

Prior to the album's debut, the band released "The 1975" and the singles "People", "Frail State of Mind", "Me & You Together Song", "The Birthday Party", "Jesus Christ 2005 God Bless America", "If You're Too Shy (Let Me Know)" and "Guys". A North American leg of the band's Music for Cars Tour, planned in support of the album, was cancelled several months prior to the record's debut. An online art exhibition entitled Artists Respond to NOACF, featuring music videos created by various artists, was released in its place. The album debuted atop the UK Albums Chart and reached number one in Australia and Scotland. Elsewhere, it peaked within the top five in Ireland, New Zealand and the United States, and the top 20 in Canada and Japan. The album polarised contemporary music critics; some lauded it as the band's magnum opus, while others derided it as confusing, chaotic and directionless. Despite this, the album appeared on numerous year-end lists and was hailed as the best release of 2020 by The Music.

  1. ^ "NOACF – The 1975 Official Store". The 1975 Store. Archived from the original on 1 February 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.