Future Islands: People Who Aren’t There Anymore review – back to melancholy banger mode

(4AD)
Some perfectly constructed pop offsets dark musings on a record elevated by Samuel T Herring’s ever richer vocals

Future Islands are best in yearning banger mode. Although their 2020 album, As Long As You Are, brought instant classic For Sure, it was often dismayingly downbeat – melancholy unrelieved by the consolation of rhythm. Luckily, People Who Aren’t There Anymore is better at dragging its tears to the dancefloor.

Here are grownup, weighty ruminations on devotion, sacrifice, separation and Covid, but The Tower and King of Sweden are also perfectly constructed pop. Iris smartly repurposes a 70s Nigerien funk beat, while Deep in the Night and Give Me the Ghost Back (“Two hundred million feel they’re underneath a knife”) offer beauty suffused with dark drama.

You could say the songs they wrote as a scrappier, come-up band had stickier choruses and more memorable riffs. The trade-off? Samuel T Herring’s voice is so much richer now, a velvet mallet wielded with a preacher’s fervour, by a man who dreams in colours you will never see. A ballad such as Corner of My Eye makes great use of his vibes, his intensity; it doesn’t seem much of anything until Herring gets out on the stump and sells it with his chewy, syllable-relishing diction.

Watch the video for The Tower by Future Islands.

Contributor

Damien Morris

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Future Islands review – not drowning but raving
Future Islands’ Samuel T Herring is one of the most sweatily intense singers around, but it’s not just theatrics

Kitty Empire

30, Apr, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
Future Islands: The Far Field review – an accomplished follow-up
(4AD)

Phil Mongredien

09, Apr, 2017 @7:00 AM

Article image
Future Islands: As Long As You Are review – intensely moving
A sixth album from the Baltimore synth-pop band finds their music as urgent and impassioned as ever

Phil Mongredien

11, Oct, 2020 @2:00 PM

Article image
Future Islands review – cult synth-rockers cross over
Yearning, bittersweet songs and an unignorable frontman make this Baltimore-based trio utterly compelling, writes Kitty Empire

Kitty Empire

09, Nov, 2014 @9:00 AM

Singles review – Future Islands are 'immensely listenable eccentrics'
Kitty Empire: Future Islands are far more idiosyncratic than their polished sound lets on

Kitty Empire

23, Mar, 2014 @12:05 AM

Article image
Future Islands: People Who Aren’t There Anymore review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
The synthpop quartet’s heart-on-sleeve frontman, Samuel T Herring, is by turns lovelorn and lovestruck on their affecting seventh LP

Alexis Petridis

25, Jan, 2024 @12:15 PM

Article image
Bolis Pupul: Letter to Yu review – delicate melancholy and banging beats
On a solo debut addressed to his late mother, the Belgian producer explores his Chinese ancestry on a playful set with shades of Kraftwerk and Abba

Kitty Empire

10, Mar, 2024 @9:00 AM

Article image
Depeche Mode: Memento Mori review – a life-affirming farewell for Fletch
Andy Fletcher’s two surviving bandmates reflect on mortality on an album of warm, weird electro-pop

Damien Morris

19, Mar, 2023 @1:00 PM

Article image
MSTRKRFT: Operator review – back to the noughties too soon?
(Last Gang Records)

Kitty Empire

24, Jul, 2016 @6:59 AM

Article image
Future Utopia review – grime’s silent partner Fraser T Smith turns up the volume
The super-producer to Stormzy, Dave and Kano showcases his solo album, with Kojey Radical and Simon Armitage among his eclectic guests

Kitty Empire

26, Jun, 2021 @1:00 PM