Review of XO Skeleton, from The Force | The strength of The Force

A powerful and feverish second album for La Force, a jewel of Montreal indie pop with a hypnotizing voice.


With her rich and accurate voice, her embodied presence and her musical intelligence, Ariel Engle is a gem of the Montreal indie pop scene who has been lending her voice and creativity to a host of projects for over 15 years. Member of the Toronto collective Broken Social Scene and collaborator of Patrick Watson (among others), La Force is the solo incarnation of the singer-songwriter, whose first album was shortlisted for the Polaris Prize in 2019 .

So here is La Force again with XO Skeleton, which she co-directed with Plants and Animals’ Warren Spicer. Surrounded by brilliant collaborators, including bassist Michka Stein (Patrick Watson, TEKE :: TEKE) Broken Social Scene saxophonist David French, drummer Liam O’Neill (Suuns) and Christophe Lamarche on keyboards (Jimmy Hunt, Chocolat), La Force obviously delivers a well-textured album, but full of interstices to make it breathe.

Between folk, touches of R&B, a little electro and distortion well assumed at the end of the album, La Force offers a pure indie pop journey, melancholic and spectral. All against a backdrop of existential observation, and the title song, XO Skeletonsums up the meaning of the album well: life is fragile and we will all die, but let’s embrace it, in the best and in the worst.

With this hypnotizing voice capable of all nuances, enveloping and truly moving, La Force lives up to its name. If there is an airy side to the whole, nothing is cutesy or watered down. On the contrary, we are dealing with a feverish and powerful universe, which uplifts and comforts, but also which surprises and which stirs up a little. That’s a lot for a single album, and that’s the strength of La Force.

Extract of Condition of us

XO Skeleton

Indie-pop

XO Skeleton

Strength

Secret City Records

7.5/10


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