There is a peculiar honesty in calling an album "Faithless". Not because disbelief is fashionable, but because certainty has become exhausting. The third full-length by Italian quartet Design does not wage war against religion so much as it mourns the disappearance of dependable foundations altogether. God, politics, institutions, even memory itself are placed on trial, not through slogans but through the slow erosion of confidence. It is an album about discovering that the floor beneath your feet was made of fog all along.
Formed in 2008, Design have steadily evolved from an industrial-tinged alternative rock act into something darker and more psychologically nuanced. Their early releases flirted with electronic rock and new wave, but "Faithless" feels like the record where those influences finally become a coherent language rather than a collection of references. Produced by Enrico Tiberi between Italy and Berlin and mastered by Pete Maher, whose résumé spans artists from Nine Inch Nails to Depeche Mode and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, the album sounds expansive without becoming overproduced. Every synth pulse, guitar scrape and programmed beat has room to breathe, as though silence itself had been invited into the mix.
The title track establishes the emotional coordinates immediately. Inspired by the helplessness of standing beside a deathbed, it transforms personal mourning into something universal. The absence of divine answers is not met with theatrical rage but with an almost desperate longing for tangible human connection. Rather than searching heaven for miracles, the song suggests that another person's embrace may be the closest thing we have.
That tension between intimate grief and societal collapse runs throughout the record. "Cold War" shifts the battlefield indoors, portraying domestic conflict with unsettling restraint. Instead of explosions, there are closed doors, suppressed emotions and the suffocating politeness that often surrounds private suffering. It is one of the album's strongest moments precisely because it understands that the loudest violence is sometimes whispered.
Musically, Design navigate the fertile ground between post-punk, darkwave and contemporary electronic rock with confidence. Echoes of Depeche Mode and New Order appear in the melodic instincts, while sharper industrial textures recall the mechanical anxiety of Nine Inch Nails or the sleek emotional abrasion of Crosses. Yet these influences rarely become imitation. The band avoids the museum-piece nostalgia that often burdens revivalist acts, preferring to reinterpret familiar aesthetics through the lens of today's fractured emotional landscape.
The sequencing deserves particular praise. "Sweet Surrender" dances defiantly through cultural decay, offering one of the record's few moments of bitter exhilaration. Its vision of celebrating while the empire burns feels less nihilistic than oddly liberating, as if acknowledging collapse were healthier than endlessly pretending stability still exists. "Blame" follows with painful introspection, refusing the increasingly fashionable habit of outsourcing responsibility. Personal accountability, it turns out, is heavier than conspiracy theories but considerably more useful.
Even the brief instrumental "12 | 12" serves a purpose, functioning as a deep breath before the second half descends further into paranoia and confrontation. "Evil Eye" dismantles toxic attachment through sharp rhythmic tension, while "Red Dragon" expands outward into biblical imagery refracted through environmental destruction and endless warfare. Rather than preaching, the lyrics present symbolic landscapes where mythology and contemporary headlines blur into each other.
The album's final stretch becomes increasingly philosophical. "Loner's Dream" offers fragile tenderness amidst existential uncertainty, asking whether love itself might simply be someone's fading dream. "Keyhole" examines media manipulation with uncommon subtlety, questioning not only what we see but our willingness to participate in carefully staged spectacles. In an era where outrage is monetized by the minute, peeking through a keyhole starts to resemble scrolling endlessly through social media. The monkey with golden chains may have upgraded to a touchscreen.
Everything ultimately converges in the magnificent closer, "The Belly of the Whale". Drawing simultaneously on literary and biblical symbolism, the whale becomes sanctuary, tomb and womb all at once. It is the place where grief ceases to be an enemy and instead becomes something one learns to inhabit. Emerging from its darkness does not erase loss; it simply allows life to continue carrying it differently.
"Faithless" doesn't surrender entirely to despair. Even when confronting death, manipulation, violence and ideological collapse, Design leave open the possibility that redemption survives through empathy, self-awareness and love rather than dogma. That is a surprisingly radical proposition in an age where certainty is sold in convenient packages and doubt is treated like a defect.
"Faithless" is not interested in providing answers. It builds a cathedral from unanswered questions, fills it with pulsing basslines, spectral synthesizers and wounded melodies, then quietly reminds us that perhaps belief has never been about possessing certainty. Sometimes it is simply the courage to keep walking after the lights have gone out. In that sense, Design have crafted one of the more emotionally mature darkwave records in recent memory: bleak without becoming cynical, introspective without becoming self-indulgent, and heavy enough to leave a bruise that lingers well after the final note fades.