Sylvan Esso: New Rule Sandyย | Loma Vista Records; August 12ย 


Since their self-titled debut in 2014, Sylvan Esso has delivered a steady stream of folksy, singsong melodies backed by pulsing electronica, songs that sound as at home in an Anthropologie dressing room as they do in a dark bar after midnight. Amelia Meathโ€™s guileless vocals meet Nick Sanbornโ€™s tremoring, eddying synth, and it sounds like flirtation, the easy partnership of two genres tucking into bed together. On No Rules Sandy, the groupโ€™s latest, they forgo some of this coziness for discovery, and the result is revivifying, letting air into the rooms where theyโ€™ve produced the worldโ€™s most palatable, tasteful dance music.

Opener โ€œMovingโ€ sets the tone, a skittering ode to compensatory numbness. Meathโ€™s flat, confessional style matches the songโ€™s content, in which she asks, โ€œHow can I be moved / When everything is moving?โ€ Itโ€™s the less pointed counterpart of 2016โ€™s โ€œRadio,โ€ trading a searing critique of sex and consumption for anxiety and anhedonia, an emotional glitch that matches its glitchy sound.

This discomfort is, counterintuitively, Sylvan Essoโ€™s most welcome departure. Where previous albums have been winsome or playful, No Rules Sandy feels a little more jagged, carries more dirt under its fingernails. That leaves room for discovery upon repeat listens, less polish and more process. โ€œYour Reality,โ€ a jumble of strings, patches, and incantatory melody, illustrates this texture. Itโ€™s nice to witness a bandโ€™s expansion, to follow a signature style into more exploratory terrain.

The albumโ€™s highlight, though, is the driving โ€œEcho Party,โ€ whose looping bridges build to a dubious, timely chorus: โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of people dancing downtown / Yeah, we all fall down / But some stay where they got dropped.โ€ Meathโ€™s flat, affectless delivery adds to the songโ€™s ominous power. Like Nora dancing the tarantella in A Dollโ€™s House, itโ€™s a stark nod to dance as a bodily release, a way to skirt the darkness. Sanbornโ€™s pinging, circular synth forms the perfect complement, a syncopated beat laced with wobbly bass. It evokes other end-of-summer jams that manage to distill the present while hearkening back to dance musicโ€™s pastโ€”Drakeโ€™s โ€œMassive,โ€ Beyoncรฉโ€™s โ€œBreak My Soul.โ€ At their best, Sylvan Esso is still playing with dualityโ€”up and down (see 2014โ€™s โ€œCoffeeโ€), movement and stagnation, containment and release.

โ€œSunburnโ€ reverts to a tried and true sound thatโ€™s less propulsive and more somnambulant. โ€œDidnโ€™t Careโ€ is a bright, poppy track about fate that needs a jolt of urgency. Still, No Rules Sandy wanders into darker rooms, and itโ€™s a welcome divergence from the bandโ€™s precedented formula, an exploration of unprecedented times.


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