When In Rome use the blunt lyric “fools are dangerous” in “Human Nature” to frame social division as an inescapable defect in the species. The track drives this interpretation forward through tough drums and a pulsing electronic bassline that insists on dancefloor movement. This rhythmic pulse separates the vocal delivery from a typical political sermon, grounding the message in a physical tempo.
Clive Farrington relies on a spontaneous vocal performance captured straight onto tape to replicate the sudden onset of social panic. He pairs cryptic queries like “did you make it out?” with demands not to wait for Easter, stripping the pandemic-era isolation of comforting resolutions. Instead of offering an optimistic chorus, the arrangement locks into a tight synth loop that sustains the momentum of the dispute. The lines treat political and religious differences not as temporary arguments, but as a new religion of hostility.
Producer Ryan Roth provided the initial instrumental track, which Devon Lougheed mixed into a cinematic electronic statement. The final mix introduces a hard edge to the duo’s classic synth-pop format ahead of the album Illumination, arriving later this summer 2026. Pre-production work by Al Judd and refinements by Nick Jackson focus the sonics on a dark drive. The final bassline loops until the track ends.




