USA TODAY US Edition

Why you need to be listening to Sylvan Esso

- @PatRyanWri­tes USA TODAY Patrick Ryan

Like many things in 2017, the pop music landscape can be difficult to stomach.

After all, how is it that adventurou­s singles like Lorde’s Green

Light have flickered and faded from the charts, while The Chainsmoke­rs’ latest frat-boy banger continues to sully the airwaves? It’s an unfair world, but one that’s made decidedly better by the presence of Sylvan Esso, who returned Friday after a three-year stretch with sophomore album What Now.

Here’s what you should know about the electro-pop up-andcomers:

SO, WHO ARE THEY?

Sylvan Esso is the duo of singer Amelia Meath and producer Nick Sanborn. They met at a show in Milwaukee in 2010, where they were playing respective­ly with trio Mountain Man and solo project Made of Oak. After a couple of years of touring and exchanging emails, Meath moved to Durham, N.C., where they started recording for Sylvan Esso’s selftitled 2014 debut album, which featured breakout singles Coffee,

Play It Right and Hey Mami.

BUT WAIT, WHY ARE THEY CALLED SYLVAN ESSO?

The name derives from indie video game Superbroth­ers: Sword

& Sworcery EP, Meath told This Is Our Jam. “In the game, there are these things called Sylvan Sprites, and when you’re doing the right thing they hop out of the trees, and when you touch them on the screen they sing. ... While we were banging our heads against the wall trying to figure out what our name was, I said, ‘Sylvans!’ and it stuck.” WHAT DO THEY SOUND LIKE? A danceable fusion of folk and pop, with glittering synths, hip-hop beats and Meath’s lilting vocals. Their influences ranges from Aaliyah and They Might Be Giants to Cyndi Lauper and D’Angelo.

WHERE HAVE I HEARD THEM BEFORE?

Their most recognizab­le tune probably is H.S.K.T., which has been featured in MTV’s Catfish:

The TV Show, and ads for AT&T and Samsung Galaxy View. Oth- erwise, they haven’t scored much success on the charts (yet).

SHOULD I LISTEN TO THAT ONE FIRST?

Radio’s certainly a great place to start, with its cheekily infectious chorus and Meath’s bumptious delivery of lines like “Faking the truth to a new pop song / don’t you wanna sing along?” Of What

Now’s other nine tracks, The Glow is a punchy, wistful must-add to your summer playlists, while Just

Dancing is a jubilant ode to young lust. The sparse Slack Jaw and

Rewind close out the album with a mesmerizin­g one-two punch, but it’s Die Young — arguably Sylvan Esso’s best song yet — that will leave you reeling with its evocative lyrics of devastated devotion. When it comes to brilliant hooks, “I was gonna die young / now I gotta wait for you, hon” is an all-timer.

HOW ARE THEY LIVE?

Engaging and loose, with a knack for dancing, as they’ve proven on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy

Fallon, and as this reporter can attest from two separate occasions seeing them in both an intimate club venue and on a parking-lot festival stage. They’ll be playing more festivals starting next month with Shaky Knees and Boston Calling before a summer U.S. tour that culminates with their own Shakori Hills fest Sept. 30 in Pittsboro, N.C.

 ?? SHERVIN LAINEZ ?? Singer Amelia Meath and producer Nick Sanborn are out with their sophomore album, What Now.
SHERVIN LAINEZ Singer Amelia Meath and producer Nick Sanborn are out with their sophomore album, What Now.
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