Beirut
Hadsel


4.5
superb

Review

by SandwichBubble USER (83 Reviews)
November 15th, 2023 | 30 replies


Release Date: 11/10/2023 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Beirut’s tearful, crowning achievement.

It feels like just yesterday I was extolling the new Beirut record (2019’s Gallipoli) as being their best in a very long time. And I still feel that way. I’ve relistened to that record so many times since it came out and it hasn’t lost it’s luster for me in the slightest. It’s a warm record, full of life and nostalgic reminiscence. Basically everything that made me fall in love with this band nearly 2 decades ago. Judging by the tepid reaction online, not that many people appreciated it. But I did. After releasing their odds-and-ends album (2022’s Artifacts), there was almost the faintest sense of finality to Beirut’s story. At least, that’s how I perceived it.

The story of how Hadsel came to be comes straight from bandleader Zack Condon himself. Where Gallipoli was somewhat a full-band effort, Hadsel was completely a one-man operation. Initially recorded just before the COVID-19 pandemic took hold of the world, and completed in the midst of said pandemic, Condon had the perfect excuse to get back to what he refers to as a “DIY approach.” Just him, an organ, some drum machines, two large analog synths, and all the time in the world. And what emerged was this. Something so pure, so clear. Simply put, Hadsel is nothing short of a triumph.

On Gallipoli, I lamented that the album was dragged down by focusing on being mellow mood music, rather than good music. So it may surprise you when I say that this record is actually mellower than their last; featuring even more instrumental passages. And softer, mellower ones at that. In fact, Hadsel almost feels dream pop in execution at times (“Balon,” “Spillhaugen,” “Regulatory”). Of course, this is still a chamber pop affair in the end, but the introduction of these new sounds has once again helped keep the Beirut formula fresh without throwing it away. While the synths felt distracting on their last few records, Hadsel weaves them in effortlessly, tucked neatly between the warm, acoustic layered wall of sound. And I don’t use that term lightly. If you know me, I hate direct comparisons. I try my hardest to avoid them in my reviews. But I genuinely hear a bit of the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds on this record. Call that blasphemy if you will, but I hear that magic in this album. When a purely instrumental track like “Melbu” can elicit real emotion out of me, I have to tip my hat right off my head.

Am I calling Zack Condon an auteur on the level of Brian Wilson? No. That’d be going too far. But it’s disturbing (and kind of exciting) that I’m even considering that a possibility, isn’t it? The production on this album is just that damn immaculate. Just when I think the album has finally reached a lull, it keeps me engaged. Even typing this review, I’ve stopped typing mid-sentence just to admire a song like “Island Life.” I’ve been a detractor of “mood albums” for a while, but Hadsel is a mood album done oh-so-right. Condon’s vocals act as merely another melodic instrument on this album, so trying to pick apart the lyrics would be pointless. I know it’s reductive to say “just ignore the lyrics and vibe,” but I can’t give you a better piece of advice. Detach yourself from the current year and the cynicism you rightfully feel. Close your eyes and close off all other unnecessary senses. Let this album speak to you in quiet whispers and cold tears. Like it did for me.



Recent reviews by this author
Faune Des FantômesSoft Water Middle Ground
Animal Collective Isn’t It Now?Deeper Careful!
Uhr Salathiel HarmsPlastika Plastika
user ratings (29)
3.6
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
SandwichBubble
November 15th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Stream: https://open.spotify.com/album/1jhgsccCbT1WXtmGUuZvIA



Oh yeah, late review.

Pre-emptive "damn you all" for eventually letting this fall to a 3.2 average like Gallipoli.

GhandhiLion
November 15th 2023


17641 Comments


pos

I ought to check these out beyond Gulag Orkestar sometime

SandwichBubble
November 15th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Even with the embarrassing Brian Wilson comparison? You're a peach. Thanks.



I like pretty much everything Beirut has put out (No No No excluded), but this just hit me the right way, I dunno. If you do, maybe ignore the fanboy 4.5/5 review going in.

someone
Contributing Reviewer
November 15th 2023


6588 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

been waiting some 15 friggin years for Beirut to finally make a front-to-back fantastic album again. here's hoping this is one

SandwichBubble
November 15th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

maybe ignore the fanboy 4.5/5 review going in. [2]

Honestly, I should've put that in the review.

AsleepInTheBack
Staff Reviewer
November 15th 2023


10112 Comments


I love Beirut! I should hear this!

SandwichBubble
November 15th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

If only everyone were so wise. Hope you dig it.



I doubt this will change many people's minds about this group, but I liked it a lot. Easily their best album in my eyes. Progressively gets better from the first track onward.

AsleepInTheBack
Staff Reviewer
November 15th 2023


10112 Comments


I’ve been slacking and have only heard the lon gisland EP but fuck the melodies they pull together on that are all fantastic I need to catch up

SandwichBubble
November 15th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Definitely check Gulag Orkestar then, at the very least. Classic indie record.



I won't say this has better melodies, but as a cohesive album, I think this tops it.

hel9000
November 15th 2023


1528 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

yeah this is really nice. agreed that Gallipoli was a little underrated too

Purpl3Spartan
November 15th 2023


8539 Comments


Just a reminder that elephant gun is like the greatest song ever

Will def be checking this. Nice review

SandwichBubble
November 15th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Thanks both, and to the mods for the feature. Appreciate it.



@hel9000 This is almost certainly going to get the same treatment as Gallipoli, which is a shame. I honestly don't know what this band could do to win the indie kids back. Louder trumpets?



@Purpl3Spartan That song does rule. This is definitely mellower than that, so be warned.

Nikkolae
November 15th 2023


6624 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

gallipoli had a pretty big impact in my life back in 2019 and then i just couldnt listen to it from 2020 onwards due to some pretty rough patches in my life, guess i might just dip my feet back in with this one, review is great btw

SandwichBubble
November 15th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Sorry to hear that. I hope you're doing better in the present.

I can only speak for myself, but I found this to be an emotional listen.



And thank you.

Nikkolae
November 15th 2023


6624 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

preciate it very much my guy, all is good now, also already a few tracks in and this is so whimsical, fantastic so far.

brandontaylor
November 16th 2023


1228 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

this was very pretty but also very boring, feels like a past-its-prime band on autopilot sadly

Hawks
November 16th 2023


87159 Comments


Flying Cub Pup is the only thing I've ever heard from this band and it rulez. Gonna czech this.

Sowing
Moderator
November 16th 2023


43944 Comments


Haven't listened to this band but a sandwich 4.5 and those genre tags just combined for some auto-hype.

Edit: monk chants with horns, nice

SandwichBubble
November 16th 2023


13796 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

The Catholic church wishes it had Gregorian chants this good.

Holy mass is never gonna be the same after this one.

Nikkolae
November 16th 2023


6624 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

as a cultural catholic, i think that wouldve made church so much more entertaining



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy