Caroline Polachek - Pang
Tiny Mix Tapes 90
Caroline Polachek
PANG
[Perpetual Novice; 2019]
Rating: 4.5/5
Caroline, what kind of wizard are you? It’s hard to make it through Pang without repeatedly asking that question.
For a while, it seemed like Caroline Polachek’s main magic trick was disappearing. After Chairlift hung it up, she seemed to vanish into the Los Angeles aether, hiding in a studio writing songs for Beyoncé, Charli XCX, and Superfruit, releasing work so minimal as CEP and so unassuming as Ramona Lisa that it hardly registered on her considerable fanbase’s radar.
Then, in June, she opened up a “Door” to another door (“Ocean of Tears”) to another door (“Parachute”) to another door… and now we’re here with Pang, an absolute triumph of “expressionist storybook goth” that recalls the great emotive artists in pop and New Age history, from Elizabeth Fraser to Imogen Heap, Enya to her (our) girl Charli <3. Executive produced by Polachek and Danny L Harle, who here favors the sonic territory of some undiscovered ethereal paradise over the uncanny trance valley of PC Music’s Huge Danny, Pang is a revelation. Like the classic 1990s PC adventure game Myst, which is cited as an influence and whose visual direction is clearly discernible in the art and ~***vibez***~ here, Polachek has created a magical fantasy land where the openness of the journey is the point, suggesting both infinite possibility and infinite doubt, the space between knowing with absolute certainty that you’re going to survive and wondering how the hell you’re going to make it through.
It’s that tension between doubt and resolve that makes Pang so compelling, as it flits from ambient soundscapes (the trifecta of “The Gate,” “Insomnia,” and “Parachute”) to acoustic beauties (“Look At Me Now”), from self-reflexive indie pop (“Caroline Shut Up,” “So Hot You’re Hurting My Feelings”) to the kinds of twinkling, pristine bangers for which Harle’s most known (“Ocean of Tears,” “Pang”). There are steel guitars (“New Normal”), harps (“Go As A Dream”), and trap drums (“Hit Me Where It Hurts”), showcasing just how versatile Harle can be with the right collaborators, who here include A. G. Cook, Jim E. Stack, Daniel Nigro, and, of course, Polachek herself.
With a less captivating vocalist, this kind of genre-hopping might have felt inconsistent, a potpourri in constant motion, too scattered to register an impact. But Polachek’s range, her penchant for leaving her gasps and deep breaths in her vocal tracks, her carefully thought-over phrasing — these tie Pang together into one very earwormy book of spells.
It’s unclear about whom these aural tonics were crafted or whether they were even crafted about anyone in particular. In that sense, there’s something in common here with Carly Rae Jepsen’s work: this is pop music that often seems more about the relationship between singer and audience than singer and lost object of love. But there has been some kind of haunting, hard-to-shake loss here that’s no less effective for its lack of specificity, as it explores the dichotomies that haunt all of us: freedom vs. safety, fear vs. hunger, pain vs. pleasure, riding it out vs. giving up.
“Ride it out,” Caroline. As Pang makes clear again and again, you are so much more than “just another girl in a sweater.”
The Guardian 80
(Columbia)
The ex-Chairlift singer gasps, yelps and croons through a well-written and melodious portrait of lust, romance and heartbreak
The hot squirt of adrenaline when you lock eyes with someone you fancy is one fuel for this superbly put-together pop record, where New Yorker Polachek – once of hipster duo Chairlift – gasps, yelps and croons her way through a discombobulating new romance. One song, a new wave masterpiece, is called So Hot You’re Hurting My Feelings and climaxes before its final chorus with a sharp, even terrified intake of breath; the title track’s title word is sung offbeat to give that sense of lust catching you off guard, like a southpaw’s sudden hook. There’s even a song called Hit Me Where It Hurts, built around a gorgeous repeated refrain, the kind of one Post Malone tops worldwide streaming charts with.
But at another point the certainty of a relationship’s failure “hit me like a brick” – this is also a break-up album, written in the wake of Polachek’s divorce. You get the feeling there weren’t hurled dinner plates or screamed recriminations. Instead, she writes about love that just fizzles out in a thin hail of circumstance. New Normal is a dancehall ballad that plays out in a series of stress dreams – injured robins, skidding SUVs – while I Give Up, a muted R&B track, sees Polachek succumb to an “apathetic kind of self defeat”; on Caroline Shut Up, she lets you right inside her lustful waltz-time neuroses.
It’s not all so nuanced and well-written, though. Hey Big Eyes is tepid trip-hop, and Ocean of Tears is as gratingly overwrought as its title, even if Polachek’s vocal control is as exceptional here as it is throughout. But overall, Pang is a vivid and melodious portrait of a restless heart.
Continue reading... Fri Oct 18 09:30:51 GMT 2019Pitchfork 73
The former Chairlift singer-songwriter centers her sweeping solo debut on her powerful voice, crafting love songs about the moment of surrender, the pain preceding it, and the euphoria after.
Fri Oct 18 05:00:00 GMT 2019The Guardian 60
(Columbia)
Caroline Polachek’s previous band Chairlift trafficked in indie R&B, earning the New York outfit both cult status and commercial recognition thanks to an iPod Nano ad. Two years on from their demise, this solo debut by Polachek – a singer blessed with “organic Autotune” – finds her working alongside avant-pop producer and erstwhile PC Music operative Danny L Harle.
Pang – a great title, suggesting melancholy by means of an onomatopoeic jolt – offers a lush take on hyper-modern pop. It bears vague similarities to a clutch of fellow travellers, while remaining palpably personal. Insomnia’s ecstatic aches suggest Björk or Weyes Blood; So Hot You’re Hurting My Feelings digitises Haim, and the pairing of a PC Music alumnus with a bold singer has its analogue in Charli XCX’s recent album.
Continue reading... Sun Oct 20 04:30:48 GMT 2019