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Moving from hooky post-punk to ambitious genre-mashing – and back again – Bloc Party‘s artistic restlessness has served them well since the early 2000s. The mix of Kele Okereke’s impassioned yelp and Russell Lissack’s angular riffs on their first EPs helped shape British indie rock for the rest of the decade, but by the time Bloc Party released their platinum-selling 2005 debut album Silent Alarm, they’d added atmospheres drawn from post-rock and electronic textures to their style.