A Decade of Black Holes and Revelations: Maybe Muse were right all along
The curtain rises on a world falling apart. The people in charge are lying and instead of trust, there’s a sense of fear, unease and uncertainty reignin...

The curtain rises on a world falling apart. The people in charge are lying and instead of trust, there’s a sense of fear, unease and uncertainty reigning supreme. Corruption is rife, division even more so. And this is still only the beginning. A world on the edge of so much worse. Sound familiar? At least the blokes on the front cover of Muse’s ‘Black Holes and Revelations’ look like they’ve got a plan. Yup, Muse’s fourth album is a decade old this Sunday (July 3rd) and perhaps makes more sense today than it did ten years ago. But more than a prophetic half-warning (if Matt Bellamy was right about this, then maybe the Queen really is related to a secret race of shape-shifting reptiles from the Alpha Draconis star system. We should also stop The Machines before it’s too late- Ed.) ‘Black Holes and Revelations’ (or ‘BHAR’ to its friends) is responsible for pretty much everything Muse have done since. It was nominated for both a BRIT and a Mercury and while it’s not the most celebrated amongst the fans (that honour probably lies somewhere between ‘Absolution’ and ‘Origin of Symmetry’) it is their most unified record. It’s Muse being Muse without trading on past glories. It catches the band in transit. It captures them crossing over from odd little outsiders to selling out stadiums again and again. It’s Muse at their most exciting, making good on all their promises while still packing a surprising punch or two.




