Australian indie pop band
Even as We Speak burned brightly for several years after forming in the mid-'80s. As a favorite of BBC Radio 1 DJ and tastemaker
John Peel and signees of the vaunted
Sarah Records, the group made the kind of fuzzy, wistful, and melodic pop that characterized the C-86 movement. They broke up in 1993, but over 20 years later reunion shows led to work on new material, and eventually
Adelphi, the band's second full-length studio album and first since their debut,
Feral Pop Frenzy, arrived over 25 years earlier. Instead of simply retracing their steps back to the fuzzy pop of their past,
Even as We Speak go to new places with
Adelphi. The album begins with "Someone," a space age pop song ornamented with funky guitar lines and driven by a blend of electronic rhythms and overblown drums. Vocalist
Mary Wyer's voice glides with precision over the song's hypnotic groove, sounding like a far more danceable
Broadcast or
Stereolab at their most elastic. Songs like the synthy ballad "Unknown" and the moody, robotic "Signs" continue the album's sci-fi undercurrents and adventurous exploration of arrangement and melodic structures. Lyrics shift between imagery of futuristic worlds and glimmers of the everyday trials of adult life, with references to therapy and romantic growth coming up alongside lyrics about Earth falling into the Sun. On the whole,
Adelphi isn't a complete revamping of the band's sound. Even their '90s album had flirtations with electronics and drum machine sounds, and the singsong melody and jangly guitars of "Forgiving" sound simple and twee before the chorus erupts into a blast of synth arpeggios and futuristic harmonies. "Stronger" is upbeat and excitable, with the same kind of moody songwriting twists and tight harmonies as the band's earliest output. Instead of revisiting past inspirations or picking up right where they left off, the new places
Even as We Speak venture with
Adelphi make for a listening experience that's more engaging than it is nostalgic. ~ Fred Thomas