2024-02-04 14:20:41
from Oliver
on February 4, 2024
in Album
Between feuilleton hype generated by the press and the resulting credibility resentment The Last Dinner Party with Prelude to Ecstasy A simply great debut album – albeit with room for improvement – was recorded.
In keeping with the title of the first work that quickly followed the band’s founding, the 41-minute renaissance of indie rock proclaimed by the London quintet using glam and baroque pop does not yet arouse complete enthusiasm. That ultimately all the hymns of praise provoked on the island The Last Dinner Party should drown out the rising Industry Plant allegations Prelude to Ecstasy However, it was still impressively demonstrated.
The five stylishly dressed ladies know how to tastefully and competently create songs that are as catchy as they are charismatic, with an exquisite sense of aesthetically clearly crafted eclecticism, which, although without any real challenge in terms of accessibility, still capture the fundamental timelessness of their inspiration in an immediately igniting but lasting way Translate material.
Abigail Morris’s vocals in particular are immediately powerful and (probably polarizing) multi-faceted, the strong vocal lines stick without a trace – and the view that Prelude to Ecstasy behind it is more the sum of its parts, which are held together by the fairytale-like, rather dreamlike arrangements, while individual motifs such as explicit guitar ideas only rarely stand out, is also corrected in the last few meters of the album: of all things fundamentally with more spacey synth force My Lady of Mercy Scrambles just as thoughtfully as the otherwise primarily Bowie-esque keyboard ABBA pearly Portrait of a Dead Girl (whose rhythmic facets are exemplary of the record’s vital dynamics) before Nothing Matters even claps to the solo.
Prelude to Ecstasy is colorful and dazzling, fun in a (sometimes somewhat staid way) without becoming pretentious or excessive. Goth, romance, pomp. Americana – there is no such thing as false restraint if it fits homogeneously into the overarching, meticulously conveyed image. The orchestral overture that gives the album its title provides the opulent framework in which The Last Dinner Party the arc of suspense that accompanies the instrumental (and superbly integrated into the flow) interlude language until the final point, which demonstrates majestic patience when it comes to Bond mysticism Mirror a round arc of suspense.
Burn Alive snappy as a latent driving anachronism with its 80s fascination Long Blondes from, the smart-competent Caesar on a TV Screen convinces with the dramatic gesture of its squeaky chorus even in mediocre form. The fabulous The Feminine Urge is an absolute highlight as an instant catchy tune and simply super great pop, the melody of which you’ve thought you’ve known from somewhere else for a long time, while the beautiful thing is happening On Your Side Ballad-esque, melodramatic stretch: beguiling! The withdrawn one Beautiful Boy blooms jubilantly and Sinner Grooves solved in a more solemn way, as if the references haunting the record – among other things Marina & The Diamonds, Kate Bush & The Howling Bells, Siouxsie & the Banshees, Florence & The Machine,…- throw a gospel-like party.
All in all, all of this may sometimes be a little too clear-cut, a little too perfectly and smoothly constructed by the strong James Ford production, which means that Prelude to Ecstasy is never as exciting as it should feel. But this hardly undermines the existing artistic quality: The Last Dinner Party Actually, they just have to put up with the accusation that their debut album is more perfect than the external impact of their music is good for at the moment.
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