Review: Ladytron – self-titled

So far, the winner of Most Intriguing Album Cover of 2019 goes to Ladytron (Mira Aroyo, Daniel Hunt, Helen Marnie, Reuben Wu) for their new, self-titled album.  A young couple runs from a luxury car left abandoned on a road toward a raging forest fire.  They are willingly, gleefully running toward chaos, fury, and death.  If that doesn’t sum up the cultural zeitgeists for many people in the U.S. and the U.K., I don’t know what does.

Ladytron’s new album is their first new material in seven years.  They’ve seen the change in the world’s political atmosphere, the further embrace of technology that is advertised as a communication tool but only drives us into our own literal and metaphorical cocoons, the Brexit vote, the 2016 U.S. presidential election, mass shootings, bombings, hurricanes, civil wars, genocides, and more things that keep us awake at night.  They’ve responded with an album of searing electro and haunting hooks.

Opening with “Until the Fire,” the vintage synths and slightly spooky double vocals us Ladytron fans love immediately swirl around you as Helen Marnie and Mira Aroyo sing about the power and danger of desire.  “The Island” is a lush synthwave track that has bright chords that hide a bit of menace (i.e., The last line of the song is “We are savages.”).

“I only came here for the view,” they sing to begin “Tower of Glass” – a song about not throwing stones, physical and verbal, at others.  “Far from Home” sounds like “classic” Ladytron, if that’s even a proper term.  The synths on it sound like they were dug out of Giorgio Moroder’s basement.  “Paper Highways” brings out their love of krautrock, not to mention industrial goth.

“The Animals” is a haunting but toe-tapping song about war, racism, and the insanity of it all.  “We are more like you than the ones than the ones that you view,” they sing.  “Run” has processed beats that would make John Carpenter jealous and mysterious lyrics like, “Stop looking at me with a gun in your hand.”  “Deadzone” has sharp-as-a-knife beats and even deadlier synth stabs and chords throughout it.

“Figurine” moves with an urgency that gets you moving right away and builds to a great rush.  The synth bass on “You’ve Changed” is outstanding.  I’m willing to bet the title refers to not only a particular person, but also the general public who seem to have lost their collective mind (i.e., “You’ve changed.  What were you thinking?”).  This song has probably been remixed by dozens of synthwave DJ’s by now to tear up dance floors, as it should.

“Horrorscope” is plain enough to understand.  Again, just look at the album cover.  The future is full of bad things if we don’t turn around now (“…across the hemispheres, and now it’s always near.”).  “The Mountain” builds from a far echo to a state of  soaring psychedelic synth bliss.  “Tomorrow Is Another Day” is almost relaxing chillwave and would fit on a make-out playlist as long as you want a bit of intrigue while you’re getting your groove on with someone.

It’s a nice return for Ladytron.  Synthwave is making a big comeback, and it’s good to see Ladytron taking the reins and shaking us out of our 24-hour news cycle-induced funk.

Keep your mind open.

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Published by

Nik Havert

I've been a music fan since my parents gave me a record player for Christmas when I was still in grade school. The first record I remember owning was "Sesame Street Disco." I've been a professional writer since 2004, but writing long before that. My first published work was in a middle school literary magazine and was a story about a zoo in which the animals could talk.

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