Chvrches influenced mainstream pop with
The Bones of What You Believe and
Every Open Eye, and on
Love Is Dead, mainstream pop returns the favor. As distinctive as their heartfelt electro-pop is -- and how well they do it --
Lauren Mayberry,
Iain Cook, and
Martin Doherty recognized they needed some variety on their third album. Instead of self-producing
Love Is Dead, they opened their creative process to collaborators who reflect the roots of their sound as well as its place in the 2010s.
Dave Stewart, whose mastery of emotive synth pop stretches back to his
Eurythmics days, served as
Chvrches' mentor, while
Greg Kurstin, who's straddled the line between alternative and mainstream pop since the '90s, co-wrote and co-produced many of the album's tracks. Not surprisingly, this is the band's biggest-sounding album yet, and the stakes in their songs have never sounded higher.
Love Is Dead lives up to its dramatic title, delivering anthems about seizing the moment in the face of loss; on songs like "Wonderland," the contrast between their dark lyrics and neon sounds is especially sharp. Similarly, the album's glossy production provides the perfect foil for
Lauren Mayberry's vocals, which haven't sounded this direct or empathetic since
The Bones of What You Believe. The way she sings "I've been waiting for my whole life to grow old/And now we never will" on "Graffiti" deftly blends heartache and joy, while "Deliverance" reaffirms that she's second to none at holding the subjects of her songs accountable for their actions. She sells many of
Love Is Dead's poppiest moments, adding an extra dash of charisma to "Forever" and "Graves," both of which find
Chvrches dancing on their troubles with a few new moves. However, not all of their changes are this successful. As they widen and narrow their sound, their music suffers when they go too far to one extreme or the other. Compared to its poignant verses, "Get Out"'s choruses are massive but thin, and "Miracle"'s distorted vocals and stomping beats are late-2010s pop trends that make
Chvrches sound interchangeable with too many other acts. Conversely, the interlude "ii" feels like an unnecessary bid for artistic credibility, and when
Mayberry isn't the focus (as on "God's Plan" and the
Matt Berninger duet "My Enemy") the album loses momentum. Fortunately, "Really Gone" -- which is so affecting that it should have been the closing track -- provides a better respite from
Love Is Dead's pop anthems. Meanwhile, "Heaven/Hell" cleverly questions what is real and what is fake, a pointed topic for a group that blurs the boundaries between indie cred and pop accessibility as skillfully as this one does. The few stumbles that the band makes on
Love Is Dead are almost refreshing; they reaffirm that
Chvrches aren't androids designed to craft perfect synth pop. Indeed, the most impressive thing about the album might be that as big as its sound gets, the band never loses touch with the humanity that's at the core of their music. ~ Heather Phares