Tshepo Mokoena 

Lower Dens: Escape from Evil review – a welcome detour into retro-pop

Haunting subject matter given a slick 80s pop treatment works thrillingly on the Baltimore four-piece’s third album
  
  

Jana Hunter of band Lower Dens
Pop connoisseur … Jana Hunter of Lower Dens. Photograph: Frank Hamilton Photograph: Frank Hamilton/PR

For the first time since their 2010 debut, Lower Dens sound remarkably, almost unnervingly, chipper. The Baltimore four-piece’s lead songwriter and guitar-playing vocalist, Jana Hunter, mines her pop-loving past on this third album, casting a glacial sheen over songs about longing, depression and love. A thrilling contrast arises between Escape from Evil’s dark subject matter and its cheery use of slick 1980s pop signatures, creating a disorienting effect on songs such as crashing opener Sucker’s Shangri-La and the single To Die in LA. Hunter’s rich, alto voice cuts through shimmering synth lines and wobbling electric guitar riffs and takes centre stage, in a departure from the more instrumental focus of that debut, Twin-Hand Movement, and 2012’s Nootropics. Hunter sounds like a hybrid of Annie Lennox and Beach House’s Victoria Legrand on a collection of songs that take a welcome detour away from Nootropics’s exploration of transhumanism and instead focus on simpler matters of the heart.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*