Whereas 2023’s Land Of Sleeper was conceived as an immersive headphones experience, this time Pigs strove for something more directly hostile. “We wanted it to be a slap in the face,” grins producer and guitarist Sam Grant. That objective came, in part, from playing so many gigs over the last couple of years. The band felt well-oiled and ripe to give listeners at home the kind of pummelling their audiences receive.
As for the words, they emerged from a bout of anxiety which derailed Matt Baty’s self-confidence to the extent that he wondered whether he’d be able to write any lyrics again. With his mind telling him he’d lost it and no longer had anything to say, the solution was to embrace the disquiet. “After a while I realised this is my muse,” remembers Baty. “I decided to give all these thoughts an avenue to release themselves, in the hope of exorcising them.” This suited the punchy and scratchier style the band were pursuing.
Pigs also see it as a response to the “everyone-for-themselves undertones of neoliberalism”, notes drummer Ewan Mackenzie. “There’s a lot more uncertainty and insecurity across society at the moment and, rather than resort to forced optimism, I think it’s important to respond with something that’s real and felt.” On Death Hilarious, then, Pigs are keen to sidestep the “Live, Laugh, Love” positivity that’s propagated through mainstream pop culture.