"You could take a break to recalibrate," Hatchie sings at one point on Giving the World Away, and thats just what she did on her second album. While her first full-length, 2019s Keepsake, proved she could expand on her 1990s-meets-21st century, dream pop-meets-Top 40 pop style with sweet sincerity, three years later she branched out with a more ambitious sound and more mature songwriting. Working with Jorge Elbrecht -- who has helped Tamaryn, Sky Ferreira, and Japanese Breakfast reach ethereal heights -- and Beach House drummer James Barone, on Giving the World Away Hatchie ventures further into the more complex and sometimes darker approach she only hinted at on her debut album. "Lights On" introduces her new outlook with harder-hitting beats, shimmering keyboards, and confident vocals that strip some of the sugar from her delivery (but not too much). The title track is an even bigger departure, with acid house keyboards and a driving urgency that recalls the electronic pop of the late 90s and early 2000s instead of the dream pop and shoegaze heyday a few years prior. However, Hatchie hasnt deserted her flair for sticky-sweet choruses or blissfully distorted guitars. There are plenty of both on "This Enchanted," which evokes Chapterhouses mix of baggy beats and clouds of guitar on their classic single "Pearl." Yet even when she sings about breezy romance on "Twin" and "Sunday Song," theres a sense of serene connection that feels more real than Keepsakes yearning and crushes. "The Key"s pairing of shoegaze riffs and glossy trip-hop beats -- which are more Olive or Zero 7 than Portishead or Massive Attack -- feels both fresh and true to her music. The same goes for "Quicksand" and "Dont Leave Me in the Rain," both of which lend more restraint and depth to the albums approach. As she ponders "the you you used to be" while drifting off on "Til We Run Out of Air"s gossamer wash of sound, she distills Giving the World Aways balancing act between contentment and the need for growth perfectly. ~ Heather Phares
Rovi
オーストラリアはブリスベン出身のシューゲイズ~ドリーム・ポップ・アーティストによる3年ぶりのセカンド・アルバムは、ジャパニーズ・ブレックファストやスカイ・フェレイラを手掛けたジョージ・エルブレヒトをプロデューサーに迎え、80年代のヴァイブスを取り込んだ野心作。チャーチズにも通じる壮大なエレクトロ・サウンドだが、どことなくオージーらしい乾いた質感もあり、双方の魅力が絶妙に混じり合っている。
bounce (C)赤瀧洋二
タワーレコード(vol.461(2022年4月25日発行号)掲載)