The Guardian (USA)

Arlo Parks review – sharp eyes but soft sounds

- Kitty Empire

We hear Arlo Parks before we see her. The singer-songwriter emerges from the gloom at the back of this southwest London club’s stage words-first, speaking more than singing – her soft tones recognisab­le, even before we glimpse her Nine Inch Nails The Downward Spiral T-shirt and red-tinged, close-cropped hair. “I wish I was bruiseless,” Parks begins. Her band add some loose breakbeats and an intriguing jazzy thrum to a track that is the opening to her new album, My Soft Machine. “Almost everyone I love has been abused/ And I am included.”

Parks has been out of sight for some time, putting the finishing touches to her highly anticipate­d second full-length outing, released this week. But the first few seconds of her reemergenc­e at this low-key gig could not be a more succinct reminder of her appeal: the way she plants emotional depth charges inside a deceptivel­y easygoing musical manner. We learn, too, as Bruiseless spools out, that she is “listening to Loomer” (by My Bloody Valentine) – and that “the person I love is feeding me cheese, and I’m happy”.

Some artists deal in generaliti­es or aphorisms or riddles; others drill down into the granular and the personal, mining specifics for universal effect. Parks has both feet in the latter camp. Her debut album, Collapsedi­n Sunbeams, won the Mercury prize in 2021 with its closely observed vignettes. (“I hold the Taco Bell and you cried over Eugene,” ran one of its most-loved songs, Eugene.) Tonight, older songs such as Caroline and Black Dog locate her work in her native London – Oxford Street, corner shops – while almost photostati­cally preserving an arguing couple, or Parks facing down a friend’s depression.

Two Grammy nomination­s followed Collapsed in Sunbeams’s success in the UK, as well as support slots with huge names such as Harry Styles and Billie Eilish. A full-on touring schedule culminated in Parks cancelling some US dates last year in the interests of self-care. (Unsurprisi­ngly, the evolving discussion about the mental health of musicians is close to her heart.) Of all the gen-Z bedroom poets throwing genre over their shoulders, Parks is one of the most instantly recognisab­le; a queer person of colour who can nail down her wider generation’s feeling of emotional exhaustion, or the crystallin­e clarity of a passing moment, in a tender coo that often references the cadences of hip-hop. Her words make frequent reference to colours, or fruits – the light with the weighty, the uncommon with the everyday. In among Parks’s many strengths, though, is one curious anomaly. Her music is more pleasant than impactful, with few distinguis­hing features given the wide range of influences she cites in songs and interviews.

Although a number of factors have changed in Parks’s setup, those qualities recur on My Soft Machine, which is named from a line in the 2019 film The Souvenir, rather than the band Soft Machine, or the William S Burroughs book The Soft Machine (though it does make reference to the human body). Parks now lives in LA and has access to pricey producers such as Ariel Rechtshaid and Briton Paul Epworth; just two of a handful that co-produced the record with her. She’s happily coupled-up with a fellow musician, Ashnikko. Her circle of friends includes Phoebe Bridgers, who collaborat­es on one of the new songs, Pegasus, released earlier this month. A melodic indie rock song with breakbeats, it attests to Parks’s romantic joy via “Prussian blue sheets” and “hard cherries”.

The good writing continues. Weightless finds the ever-watchful Parks noting “your deltoid flex as you cough on the phone”. Devotion, meanwhile, probably takes its title from Devotions, a collection of poetry by the late American writer Mary Oliver (Parks is a fan) and revels in love. “Your touch embroiders me,” sings Parks, her vocal rhythm invoking a touch of R&B as much as the grungey pop of the song’s finale. Deftones and Kim Deal are mentioned in the lyrics; Parks straps on an electric guitar for the noisy bit.

It would be fantastic if there were more memorable passages like it. If there is an inconsiste­ncy in Parks’s work, it’s that her more startling insights aren’t matched by the sounds around them; the jazz-poetry of Bruiseless does not recur past the first minute. Challengin­g themes do not inevitably demand challengin­g music, but Parks’s nuanced words deserve richer fare than the polite, mid-paced backings that accompany them tonight. Blades just percolates along serviceabl­y, its light funk-pop and Chic guitar amiable enough but at odds with the charisma coming off Parks herself. There’s a pleasant old-time roll to Purple Phase, but the effect is wallpapery rather than committed.

In Parks’s introducti­on to her album, she speaks about “moving through worlds with wonder and sensitivit­y” as a response to “PTSD, grief and self-sabotage”. Her work has an uncommon degree of sensitivit­y, but an artist of Parks’s substance could use some tunes with a little more wonder in them.

 ?? Photograph: Sophia Evans/The Observer ?? ‘Mining specifics for universal effect’: Arlo Parks at Pryzm.
Photograph: Sophia Evans/The Observer ‘Mining specifics for universal effect’: Arlo Parks at Pryzm.

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