The Guardian (USA)

Arctic Monkeys: There’d Better Be a Mirrorball review – Alex Turner channels Bacharach

- Shaad D'Souza

On their 2018 album Tranquilit­y Base Hotel & Casino, Arctic Monkeys took a dramatic turn for the cosmic. The band’s sixth album, Tranquilit­y Base saw singer and songwriter Alex Turner, drummer Matt Helders, bass player Nick O’Malley and guitarist Jamie Cook ditch the muscular arena-rock sound of 2013’s AM in favour of sleazy, absurdist lounge pop. On each song, Turner sang from the perspectiv­e of some kind of rakish, wine-drunk loser, becoming a lounge lizard singing at the album’s titular casino and a property developer ranting about his gentrifica­tion of the moon’s surface. Released without any advance singles, it was Arctic Monkeys’ most obtuse record yet – an artistic triumph that, nonetheles­s, seemed to alienate fans more accustomed to their booming, riff-heavy earlier work.

Four years later, Turner and co are preparing to release The Car – their seventh album, due on 21 October. Fans praying for an album with a little less bong-head philosophy seem to be in luck: Speaking to the Big Issue earlier this month, Turner promised that “sci-fi is off the table. We are back to earth.” There’d Better Be a Mirrorball, the album’s first single, makes good on that promise. This is not just a return to more accessible lyricism post-Tranquilit­y Base, it’s one of the purest, most clear-cut breakup songs Turner has written in years. Over lush strings repeating the same simple, mournful chord progressio­n, Turner sings about the dying days of a relationsh­ip without any of his usual brio. Instead, this song’s refrain almost feels like a plea: “If you wanna walk me to the car / You oughta know I’ll have a heavy heart / So can we please be absolutely sure that there’s a mirrorball?”

It’s the oldest trick in the pop songbook: Survey your broken heart and describe how the fragments catch the light. This is no disco track, though. There’d Better Be a Mirrorball draws its pastoral mood from Bacharach and

David classics – the Walker Brothers’ Make It Easy on Yourself is a clear antecedent here – and captures the elegant slow build possessed by so many 60s Bond themes. The sound of this song may be far less zany than anything on Tranquilit­y Base, but Arctic Monkeys are clearly still invested in writing ballads that move with the slowness and smoothness of treacle dripping from a spoon. There’d Better Be a Mirrorball seems slight at first – but by the time it’s over, there’s no doubting its power.

 ?? ?? ‘Back to earth’ … Arctic Monkeys. Photograph: Zackery Michael/PR
‘Back to earth’ … Arctic Monkeys. Photograph: Zackery Michael/PR

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