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Frances Cone delivers dreampop with a purpose

“LATE RISER” (Living Daylight/Thirty Tigers)

- Review: Scott Straud

Frances Cone’s new album “Late Riser” is a brilliant work of modern melancholi­a that finds the sweet spot between soothing and soaring. Call it dreampop with a purpose.

The band builds on the creative songwritin­g of Christina Cone, a classicall­y trained pianist with a sweetly, breathy singing voice. She draws an assist on arrangemen­ts from Andrew Doherty, her partner and primary accompanis­t. A halfdozen other musicians contribute, but Cone and Doherty are the constants — and the band’s driving force.

“Late Riser” was recorded in New York and Nashville, where Cone and Doherty moved recently. It’s tempting to hear the sensibilit­ies of both places represente­d, though that may be reading too much into work that could comfortabl­y emerge from either city’s vibrant alternativ­e scene. Still, there’s an earthy kind of earnestnes­s that keeps Cone’s urbane compositio­ns from ranging too far out into space.

Many of the songs set melodic piano and acoustic guitar above a pulsating bass or guitar line that lends urgency to Cone’s songs. She delivers them with intensity, whether on power ballads like “Wide Awake” or the mournfully majestic “Easy Love.”

The soaring comes when Doherty and the others add harmony and the music modulates up, as it does on the shimmering “Arizona.”

The pattern of crescendo may be mildly formulaic, but the effect remains anthemic and inspiring — and it succeeds again and again on this consistent­ly powerful album, one that signals a band taking flight.

 ??  ?? Frances Cone delivers dreampop with a purpose
Frances Cone delivers dreampop with a purpose

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