eMusic Review
You'd be forgiven for not identifying the Clientele as a pop band. Up until this point, the UK trio seemed a little ashamed of that fact themselves. For the last eight years they've played a perverse game of duck-and-cover, smothering their crystalline choruses under layers of dense haze that blurred the edges and made the melodies feel muted and indirect. There's a honey of a heartbreaker buried somewhere in the band's 2000 single "(I Want You) More Than Ever," but the band hid it so far under a bushel of reverb that it would take a medium with a divining rod to find it.
The Clientele blow that fog away on Strange Geometry, their cleanest, clearest and most immediately winning effort to date. It's fine and good to emulate Felt's cumulonimbus pop, but eventually even Felt caved in and made the crisp and coherent Forever Breathes the Lonely Word. The Clientele seem perfectly at ease following suit. The music is still spare — the group's echoey guitar patterns are fleshed out only by flourishes of violin — but there's a beauty here that has eluded them in the past. "My Own Face Inside the Trees" is brisk and jaunty, like the… read more »