The first sampling of this brave new world was MANTRA, released ahead of the band’s surprise sets at Reading & Leeds 2018. Written at the Sheffield HQ of Oli’s Drop Dead clothing label, amo’s first single framed being in love as membership to some sort of secret society, with the opening words ‘Do you want to start a cult with me?’ But although the song wasn’t a full-blooded return to the heavier sounds of old, neither did it hint at just what was in store for the rest of the album. That was a surprise that would come later. What was clear, however, was that Horizon were operating in a bigger league than ever before.
Their skills had already begun to open unexpected doors. Oli and Jordan’s status as self-sufficient producers, having done That’s The Spirit themselves, had caught the attention of their childhood heroes in Limp Bizkit. And while the experimental sessions for that band’s long-gestating album that may or may not still be called Stampede Of The Disco Elephants ultimately went nowhere, the Bring Me duo didn’t leave the experience empty-handed. Instead, they took one of the almighty riffs they’d kicked around with the nu-metal legends and incorporated it into next single Wonderful Life. A look at those times when love is absent, in the lyric, ‘Alone, getting high on a Saturday night / I’m on the edge of a knife’ it’s also, in part, an ode to Oli’s past excess, as well as feelings of isolation, even when you don’t actually want to be part of what everyone else is doing.
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While the original plan had been for Oli to perform the song alone, somewhere along the line the frontman had the idea of recruiting Dani Filth. After some Instagram DMs, which the Cradle Of Filth frontman initially took to be someone taking the piss, it was on. So was the video, in which Dani, in full stage-gear, goes to the supermarket, while the band carry out mundane activities.
He wasn’t the most surprising guest, though, and elsewhere Nihilist Blues saw the band collaborating with experimental Canadian musician Grimes. Jordan has called it “an example of us really going for it on this record”, while both he and Oli have described the dark-bellied rave workout as their favourite track on the record. Not only did Nihilist Blues illustrate the band’s broad musical outlook, it was evidence, too, of how other artists, far and wide, now view them. “[Grimes is] someone we respect,” explained Jordan, “and not someone you’d expect to find working with a metal band. Or a rock band. Or whatever it is we are.”