![]() ![]() On “That Girl” and “Stop Desire”, the verse vocals are made as sonically monotonous as possible, allowing their melodic choruses to stand out that much more. Much of the duo’s songwriting talents appear to have been fixed on the album’s many meteoric, arena-ready choruses with the rest of the songs relegated to making those set pieces seem even more massive when bookended with somewhat less expressive passages. As even their titles indicate, Heartthrob is more concerned with the the joys and follies of naive, youthful love while Love You to Death aims deeper and darker, reflecting on the complications and the all-too-true realities of romantic passion, even as they operate in pretty much the same musical territory.īut despite remaining more-or-less beholden to the musical fabric laid out in Heartthrob, Tegan and Sara can’t help but take some misguided liberties with a sound that does Love You to Death’s sometimes dreary sensibility no favors. ![]() Heartthrob begins with the driving, party-starting force of “Closer”, a celebration of the band’s proficient adaptation of pop style, whereas Love You to Death kicks off with “That Girl”, a piano-led, uptempo ballad with a deeply introspective, self-conscious slant (“When did I become that girl? / That girl I see”) that explores the psychological effects of romantic fatigue and the failure of personal judgment (“Sick and tired of things getting tough / Never gonna be enough”). This is made clear even in the tone-setting of each record. Love You to Death indicates that Tegan and Sara know exactly where their new sound could use some refinement. This creative arc finds Tegan and Sara becoming far more comfortable in a pop environment that’s still fairly unfamiliar to them, reverting back to their old motifs of confessional songwriting and stepping gently away from the broad messaging and warm comforts of convention that initially brought them there. Its refrain - “You treat me like your boyfriend / And trust me like a very best friend / You kiss me like your boyfriend / You call me up like you want your best friend” - still has the widely relatable tilt of a song like “Closer”, but it’s encased in raw, private detail and a narrowed scope which lends it the realness that Tegan and Sara loyalists have always associated with them but went mostly unseen with Heartthrob’s removed formality. The detached sentimentality of a hook like, “All I want to know is / Can you come a little closer,” is not mirrored by that of the band’s new single, inspired by Sara Quin’s real-life relationship with a woman who had never been with another girl before. To that last point, the generic universality of Heartthrob’s major hit “Closer” stands in stark contrast with the intimate personal themes uncovered throughout Love You to Death’s big set pieces such as “Boyfriend”. ![]() This truth was evident from the outset with the band’s latest single “Boyfriend”, which signalled both an unassailable devotion to the sugary, neon aesthetics of Heartthrob and a more minor shift in the band’s thematic compass. Now, because of Heartthrob’s surprising success in both critical and commercial circles, Love You to Death aims to be as similar as possible to its predecessor (although it may contain just as many, more tenuous differences), resulting in an audience that will undoubtedly be unable to escape listening to this new effort with the analytical ears of someone deeply attached to its sister album. This isn’t debatable, it was calculated the duo even returned to producer Greg Kurstin to actualize the same effects reached on that album. Comparisons can’t be avoided: Tegan and Sara’s latest album Love You to Death is a clear continuation of the path they charted three years ago on their unlikely ascent into retro synthpop splendor, Heartthrob. ![]()
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