Poliça: Give You the Ghost – review

(Memphis Industries)

Poliça are an offshoot of Ryan Olson's Gayngs collective, produced by Olsen and fronted by vocalist Channy Leaneagh. They recorded this debut LP in the wake of Leaneagh's divorce, and its R&B-inspired electronica feels appropriately grief-stricken, fizzing with minor-key synths. Leanagh's laments are often indistinct, lost to a wash of silvery Auto-Tune and cascading reverb, and bolstered by a hybrid of natural and digital beats. Influences fluctuate between styles old and new, evoking shades of Portishead's 90s eeriness in places, while sounding starkly futuristic on the pummeling, siren-strewn stab of Violent Games. Their best arrives mid-album, with the seductive, chiming single Lay Your Cards Out, temporarily collapsing the album's darker tensions in to an aching, cathartic slow jam. The lighter touches – grainy jazz trumpets on Dark Star, funk bass on Leading to Death – suggest a duo set on expanding this heartbroken electronica.

Contributor

Charlotte Richardson Andrews

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Poliça: Shulamith – review
There's perhaps too much aural clutter around Channy Leaneagh's slinky soul vocals, but Poliça's second album is still a beautiful thing, writes Harriet Gibsone

Harriet Gibsone

17, Oct, 2013 @9:30 PM

Article image
Kwes: ilp. – review
There's something distinct and transporting about this 26-year-old producer's droning, dicordant electronic soul, writes Paul MacInnes

Paul MacInnes

17, Oct, 2013 @8:30 PM

Article image
Hot Chip: In Our Heads – review
Hot Chip are one of the UK's greatest exponents of quirky, compelling pop music – so why aren't they getting the credit they deserve, asks Alexis Petridis

Alexis Petridis

07, Jun, 2012 @2:31 PM

Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs: Trouble – review

Orlando Higginbottom wears headdresses like Lady Gaga and shows equal bravado in the musical influences he has acquired, writes Paul MacInnes

Paul MacInnes

07, Jun, 2012 @9:59 PM

Article image
Banks: The Altar review – an unconvincing 2016 pop moodboard

Kate Hutchinson

29, Sep, 2016 @8:45 PM

Article image
Sohn: Rennen review – affected modern blues with some intriguing touches

Rachel Aroesti

12, Jan, 2017 @9:15 PM

Article image
Romare: Love Songs Part Two review – experimental psychedelic love songs

Hannah J Davies

10, Nov, 2016 @9:45 PM

Article image
Cooly G: Wait ’Til Night review – stripped down seduction
Lust is the driving force of this impressive, bass-driven collection of songs from the determinedly direct Merrisa Campbell, writes Paul MacInnes

Paul MacInnes

16, Oct, 2014 @9:15 PM

Article image
Majical Cloudz: Are You Alone? review – surreal and beguiling pop
Adding absurdist moments to the sadness of being alone in a crowd, Devon Welsh and Matthew Otto provide a bewitchingly awkward intensity

Kate Hutchinson

15, Oct, 2015 @9:00 PM

Article image
FKA Twigs: LP1 review – a singular piece of work in an overcrowded market

Alexis Petridis: Another supposedly mysterious pop star turns out to be a pretty normal human being – but with songs this good, who cares?

Alexis Petridis

07, Aug, 2014 @1:59 PM