After her international breakthrough in 2017 with the song "No Roots," Berlin-based alt-pop artist
Alice Merton took her anthemic full-length debut, 2019's
Mint, to number two in Germany and charted elsewhere in Europe while also landing in the Top 20 of Billboard's Independent Albums chart. Following three years later,
S.I.D.E.S. offers a sizeable 15-song track list written and recorded during a period that included pandemic shutdowns as well as both personal and professional conflict. The resulting material features lyrics that are more existential and confrontational, in addition to a palette that's a touch darker and more abrasive, all conceived by
Merton, who co-wrote and co-produced every song alongside a rotating cast of contributors. Among them were producer
Jonny Coffer (
Beyonce,
Ellie Goulding), producer/songwriter
Jennifer Decilveo (
Andra Day,
Porridge Radio), and mixer
Matty Green (
Dua Lipa,
Weezer). She kicks off the album with the defiant, then regretful "Loveback," whose early declaration of "I don't need you" is accompanied by melodic lead guitar, chugging bass and drums, and shimmery keys. However, a more authoritative chorus has other ideas, beginning with the impatient bass drum-accompanied vocal "Now I want my love back." Bold, catchy anthems are
Merton's wheelhouse, and they populate
S.I.D.E.S., although there are a few diversions here in the form of the midtempo "Blurry," a yearning, '80s pop-evoking entry with a similar mix of synths and electric guitar, and the gentler, more melancholy ballads "Everything" and "Shiny Things," which borrows EDM-oriented sound effects without ever settling into club cliches (although a couple later tracks test that boundary). Likewise, "Mania" adopts a spookier atmosphere with banshee-like backing vocals, and "Vertigo" borders on a cinematic hard rock with moments of unison vocals and synth bass. These songs feel more like modest digressions in the scheme of things, though, especially when
S.I.D.E.S. ends on the pulsing "The Other Side," an empowering, marching pop anthem that makes it clear
Merton is aiming to return to the charts. ~ Marcy Donelson