Small Black – Limits of Desire

Album Review by Bram E. Gieben | 03 May 2013
Album title: Limits of Desire
Artist: Small Black
Label: Jagjaguwar
Release date: 13 May

Although Limits of Desire is Small Black's second album proper, it's also a follow-up to last year's fantastic Moon Killer mixtape, released online for free. The conceit of Moon Killer was to mix hip-hop beats with shoegaze guitars and dream-pop melodies, lending an extra edge to tracks like Two Rivers. On Limits of Desire, the hip-hop influences of Moon Killer and New Chain are replaced by a softly-shaded synth-pop bent.

When it works, as on openers Free At Dawn and Canoe, the results are impressive – a narcotic wash of muted guitars and gently-pulsing synths underpin a louche, breathy vocal, everything concealed behind a film of reverb. But No Stranger, the title track and Breathless feel like half-finished New Order offcuts, while Sophie errs towards the twee. Only A Shadow lifts proceedings again, burying the vocals beneath a propulsive house beat. It's a pleasant enough experience, but fails to match the inventiveness of Moon Killer for both ideas and hooks. [Bram E. Gieben]

http://www.facebook.com/SmallBlk