Fran Healy’s solo debut suggests there isn’t much need for Travis to exist anymore: With songs such as “Buttercups” and “Holiday,” Healy proves he can still write silly, forgettable pop, but he’s also developed a lushly dark edge that’s more interesting than most of his band’s recent output. Playing nearly all of the instruments, Healy opens the record with a string of mature, orchestral tracks that are alternately beautiful and unsettling. Sounding world-weary and tired, he ruminates on broken relationships, aging (“Rocking Chair”), and death (“As It Comes,” featuring a barely noticeable bassline by Paul McCartney) through sadly bittersweet narratives. Healy borrows generously from the Britpop landscape, and like Thom Yorke, often uses his voice as an instrument itself; Wreckorder presents Healy’s vocals at their most fragile and emotive, to best effect on “Anything,” an achingly soft, measured love song. (Oddly, his voice makes a suitable pairing with Neko Case, who duets on the shadowy “Sing Me To Sleep.”) Predictably, there are some truly terrible lyrics here and there, and a few tracks (such as “Shadow Boxing”) are ambling, dull filler. In spite of the throwaway moments, however, Wreckorder proves to be Healy’s most thoughtful work since Travis’ The Invisible Band.
Fran Healy: Wreckorder
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2024-12-26 16:37:52