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The Sounding Board

Delights make a good first impression on If Heaven Looks A Little Like This

A weekly column where New Music Tuesdays live on. Conversation is encouraged in the comments.

If Heaven Looks A Little Like This

Every Tuesday, the Sounding Board is a space for a short-ish review of a recent-ish release and conversations about new-to-you music. We’ll get things started with a write-up about a newer, likely under-heard album, and invite you to share your music musings in the comments.

Delights make good on their name on the Manchester band’s debut full-length album. 

Every song on If Heaven Looks a Little Like This, released January 17 via Modern Sky, dares listeners to swim Scrooge McDuck-style through an embarrassment of ebullient ear candy or else drown beneath its stockpile of slick sounds.

Generally, these are borrowed baubles that owe something to a bygone era of indie rock. Huge harmonies, just-so jangle, a willingness to build around a catchy synth line, dance-y polyrhythms and Adam Maxwell’s emotive lead vocals all echo past Manchester music glories as well as dance rock’s mid-aughts glory days.1 While these influences are readily apparent, Delights avoid falling into the the tacky, hacky pitfall that snagged the likes of The Dare or Greta Van Fleet. That’s because the band is canny, confident and competent enough to mix-and-match elements from its predecessors and make something distinct with them.

“Two Times Over” starts with warbling synths nearly worthy of Gillian Gilbert, slides into a shimmering guitar part John Squire would probably be happy with, then hits a wood block-fueled dance groove that feels like “House of Jealous Lovers” at three-quarter speed. That song is a microcosm of the album as a whole in that it blatantly stands on the shoulders of giants, without becoming a straight soundalike that would come off as a paltry scale model in the image of genre titans.2

That ability to blend disparate familiar sounds is also a major testament to the young band’s versatility. Lead guitarist Ben Squires is particularly impressive whether he’s pseudo-chanking for a dance track, channeling Johnny Marr’s jangle or strumming like Noel Gallagher. The album’s production, credited to Michael Smith, also does some heavy lifting because no matter what genre Delights dabbles in, If Heaven Looks A Little Like This sounds fantastic. It’s clear, crisp and slick without being sterile or overproduced, even when tracks get busy.

However, there is some downside to that consistent clarity, especially when Delights succumb to their gentler impulses.

On If Heaven Looks a Little Like This‘ penultimate track “Say It Once,” that audio Teflon style meets a catchy, quivering vocal hook backed by music that doesn’t quite rock in a way that evokes a corporate coffee shop or VH1’s repertoire circa 2007 instead of the other better, cooler bands referenced above.3

But, the dull doldrums are handily outnumbered by hooks, harmonies and heartbeats of yesteryear’s parties.

  1. I hear traces of the Smiths, the Stone Roses, New Order, Oasis, and even the 1975 in this album’s DNA. On the dance-rock side, I’m getting a strong sense of the Rapture. The band doesn’t seem to shy away from that comparison and also cites Hot Chip and CSS as influences. https://www.musicglue.com/delights/home. If you cast a wider U.K. net, Kaiser Chiefs and Foals seem like reference points, too. ↩︎
  2. “And It Goes” is probably the track that does the least to subvert, blend or otherwise doctor up its source material. It just is a ’00s-era dance-rock track. But a genre pastiche can be fun, especially since the source material is old enough to drink at this point. ↩︎
  3. Think Snow Patrol, the Fray or Keane. Super competent, commercially viable and, typically, painfully bland. ↩︎