初期VIVIAN GIRLSのドラマーであり、さらにDUM DUM GIRLSへと、ガールズ・バンドを渡り歩き、数々のメディアに賞賛される作品を作り上げてきたFRANKIE ROSEが6年ぶりの最新アルバム『LOVE AS PROJECTION』をリリース!
ニューウェーブのフックとポストパンクのドライブ感はそのままに、モダンなプロダクションと最新鋭のインストゥルメントを駆使し、より洗練されたサウンドに仕上がっています!
彼女お得意のドリーミーな世界観を失うことなく、フランキー初期のDIYパンク時代のパワーと推進力をもって築かれたアートポップ・コレクションをご堪能下さい!
発売・販売元 提供資料(2023/01/27)
Frankie Roses personalized brand of sharp-cornered pop shines through no matter what form her music takes. Her earliest solo material was reverb-heavy D.I.Y. garage punk similar to the early iterations of both the Vivian Girls and Dum Dum Girls that shed been a part of, but her love of glossy synth pop was working its way into her sounds as early as her 2012 album Interstellar. While subsequent records mixed organic, goth-tinged rock instrumentation with subtle digital undercurrents, Rose goes all in on electronic pop with her fourth solo effort, Love as Projection. Opening track "Sixteen Ways" serves as a no-nonsense introduction to her new approach, with a dense instrumentation heavy on swelling bass synths, fluttering melodic keyboard arpeggios, and brittle but beautiful vocal harmonies. There are some guitars in the mix, but theyre relegated to the background to make space for Roses futuristic sounds to unfurl. "Anything" is much the same, but guided more by melodic hooks that call up the Day-Glo tones of 80s new wave. Rose gets deeper with the electronic production as the album goes on, implementing wobbly sub-bass rhythms and subtle drumnbass breaks on the moody "Had It Wrong" and spiraling ping-pong delays on the minimal but head-spinning "Molotov in Stereo." Her full embrace of electronics takes a slightly different articulation on each of Love as Projections ten tracks. Theres a dreamy nostalgia akin to M83 on "DOA," but the prominence of roughed-up, chorus-doused bass guitar and noisy interjections are in keeping with the kind of uncommon arrangements Rose has been creating since her earliest days. Her experiments with ambient softness on "Feel Light" and drawn-out and cyclical album closer "Song for a Horse" feel connected to the more upbeat tracks by the way she carefully weaves together layers of melody. The album is an unequivocal move into new territory for her, but it also doesnt feel awkward or ill-fitting in its sweeping change. The lush synths and bubbling beats carry the same wild dreaminess she achieved on songs where she was covering D.I.Y. rock songs in sheets of reverb, and its more Roses exacting and specific songwriting design than the instrumentation that makes Love as Projection feel so wonderfully strange, secret-keeping, and exciting. ~ Fred Thomas
Rovi