Florence + the Machine: Everybody Scream review alt-rock survivor surveys her kingdom with swagger
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Florence + the Machine: Everybody Scream review  alt-rock survivor surveys her kingdom with swagger
"The title track of Everybody Scream provides a suitably striking opening for Florence + the Machine's sixth album. A sinister organ and a choir of voices harmonise in the style of a horror theme, replaced in short order by the sound of screaming and a stomping glam rock rhythm; instead of the shouts of Hey! that traditionally punctuated a glitterbeat in the 70s, there are distaff cries of Dance! and Turn!"
"Its sound offers a corrective to the notion that whenever the National's Aaron Dessner appears as co-producer in an album's credits, as he does here, it means the artist in question is striving for tastefully hued indie folk the sound he brought to Taylor Swift's 2020 albums Folklore and Evermore, Ed Sheeran's Autumn Variations and the mistier moments of Gracie Abrams' The Secret of Us."
"It also provides a backdrop over which Florence Welch can ruminate on what sounds like a very complicated relationship with fame. She says she can only become her full size on stage and openly relishes the control she can exert over an audience, breathless and begging and screaming. Equally, there appears to be a downside. Look at me run myself ragged, blood on the stage, she sings. But how can I leave when you're calling my name?"
The title track of Everybody Scream opens with a sinister organ and a choir that evoke a horror theme before giving way to screams and a stomping glam-rock rhythm. The song replaces vintage glitterbeat shouts with feminine cries of Dance! and Turn!, creating a theatrical, confrontational sound. Aaron Dessner co-produces, but the result departs from his indie-folk palette associated with Folklore and Evermore. Florence Welch uses the backdrop to examine a conflicted relationship with fame, reveling in onstage expansion and audience control while acknowledging physical and emotional tolls. The artwork references paganism, witchcraft and 14th-century mystic Julian of Norwich.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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