CHVRCHES fresh but still gloriously dark on new album ‘Love Is Dead’

SHARE CHVRCHES fresh but still gloriously dark on new album ‘Love Is Dead’
chvrches_photoby_matt_lief_anderson_6.jpg

Lauren Mayberry of CHVRCHES. | Matt Lief Anderson/Pitchfork Music Festival

In one of those divine twists, two very different artists are offering songs titled “God’s Plan” this year. You probably know the one by Drake. But there’s also one by the Scottish synth pop group CHVRCHES. It might not top the charts, but it’s still a great, hypnotic gem.

“God’s Plan” is part of the sonically bright but thematically still gloriously dark “Love Is Dead,” the trio’s third album. Those thick, suffocating blankets of synth from 2013’s “The Bones of What You Believe” have been hacked away, offering a cleaner, lighter and, yes, more commercial sound than even their 2015 breakthrough “Every Open Eye.”

But CHVRCHES have always deceived, offering 1980s-influenced pop with depth. Lyrically, the band is at its best here, exploring our inhumanity to each other while still making high-energy songs.

Nowhere is that more evident than on the synthesizers-and-drum-fueled “Graves,” with the punch-in-the-gut lyrics: “They’re leaving bodies in stairwells/and washing up on the shore/You can look away, while they’re dancing on our graves.”

CHVRCHES — Lauren Mayberry, Iain Cook, and Martin Doherty — have gotten producing help this time, a first. Nine of the 13 tracks were produced by Greg Kurstin, who has worked with everyone from Halsey and Adele to Sia and the Foo Fighters. Many of his songs seem to flirt with bubblegum pop if you’re not paying attention.

The best song is the first single, “Miracle,” the only tune on the album produced by Steve Mac. It begins with Mayberry’s airy, angelic voice — “Careful what you wish for,” she sings — before moving to heavier, distorted terrain.

Other standouts include the throbbing, almost Taylor Swiftian “Get Out” and the gauzy “My Enemy” featuring Matt Berninger of The National, their voices melding nicely.

The album ends with “Wonderland,” a perfect summation of CHVRCHES: a crisp, poppy delight with whiplash lyrics. “We live in a wonderland,” Mayberry sings. “Like blood isn’t on our hands.”

The cover of <a href="https://chvrch.es" target="_blank" rel="noopener">“Love is Dead” by Chvrches.</a> | Glassnote Records

The cover of “Love is Dead” by Chvrches. | Glassnote Records

The Latest
With all the important priorities the state has to tackle, why should Springfield rush to help the billionaire McCaskey family build a football stadium? The answer: They shouldn’t. The arguments so far don’t convince us that this project would truly benefit the public.
Art
“Chryssa & New York” is the first museum show in North America in more than four decades to spotlight the artist. It also highlights her strong ties to Chicago’s art world.
If these plans for new stadiums from the Bears, White Sox and Red Stars are going to have even a remote chance of passage, teams will have to drastically scale back their state asks and show some tangible benefits for state taxpayers.
The Bears put the figure at $4.7 billion. But a state official says the tally to taxpayers goes even higher when you include the cost of refinancing existing debt.
Gordon will run in the November general election to fill the rest of the late Karen Yarbrough’s term as Cook County Clerk.