It's hard to think of another indie rock band that's as consistently compelling as
the Joy Formidable. Every album is a polished gemstone of heart-bludgeoning alt-rock, teetering in a magical netherworld between
My Bloody Valentine and the
Pixies. It's a sound that crashes through whatever your current mood is and buries you deep within its smoldering, lyrical magma. The group's fifth album, 2021's pulse-quickening
Into the Blue, is no exception. Recorded in Utah where the Welsh trio have lived on-and-off since at least 2018,
Into the Blue finds guitarist/vocalist
Ritzy Bryan, bassist
Rhydian Dafydd Davies, and drummer
Matt Thomas crafting a shimmering batch of sun-baked, dune-high anthems. There's a lovely dichotomy to
the Joy Formidable's sound here, at once economic in its raw, guitar/bass/drums conception, yet far-reaching with a dynamic sonic palette that soars to the horizon. It's an epic quality that's mirrored in their lyrics. With their dewy vocals expertly off-set by their fuzztone, tidal-wave guitar riffs,
Bryan and
Davies (former romantic partners who overcame their 2013 break-up to keep the band going) dive into songs that explore their need to find ways to continually reconnect with the divine magic that initially inspired their creative passion. On the title-track they sing, "Now I see this place was here all along/Don't fear the move out of the past/Let time take your hand and guide you." It's just this kind of poignant Zen alchemy that
the Joy Formidable returns to time and again on
Into the Blue. It's a sound that demands your surrender, which you don't mind giving in to. ~ Matt Collar