Remarkably, chiming with the album’s mission of bringing people together in spite of their differences, We Got The Power also features Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher, Damon Albarn’s chief rival in the 90s, during the “Battle Of Britpop”. “I thought it might be cute, the idea of us singing about the power to love each other,” Albarn said in an interview with Vulture, describing the song as a “strange kind of Britpop clarion call from the grave”.
Boasting Gorillaz’s most socially-aware and thought-provoking clutch of songs to date, Humanz proved to be just the tonic the world needed. Despite this, Albarn insisted that the album wasn’t intended as a political statement, asserting that “it’s not polemical, it’s quite abstract”. That said, there is still a sense that Humanz expresses the creeping fear of a worst-case scenario coming to pass, as grimly expressed by rapper Pusha T’s performance on Let Me Out. “[Obama] is gone, who is left to save us?” he asks, riding an electro-rap groove blessed with the soulful tones of R&B legend Mavis Staples (“[Orlando] we mourn, I’m praying for my neighbours,” the rapper continues, referencing a then recent shooting at an LGBTQ+ nightclub. “They say the devil’s at work and Trump is calling favours”).
Selling 140,000 copies in its first week, Humanz debuted at No.2 in both the UK and the US, with fans receiving Gorillaz’s ambitious post-apocalyptic party as a call to arms, a reminder that, in times of crisis, we must come together to fight for what we believe in and create a better world.
The legacy: “The world has gone slightly mad”
Without a doubt, Albarn’s vision for the album had proved to be far more prescient than even he had intended. As Donald Trump set about serving his first (and, at the time of writing, his last) term as US President, few albums captured the unease of a world in the grip of upheaval better than Humanz. Nothing short of a conceptual masterclass, its reputation has only continued to grow. “It was set in the future, it was set in when the world was just going to go slightly mad,” Albarn said to The New York Times, before adding, soberly: “And the world has gone slightly mad, there’s no question about it.”