Shulamith

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AlbumOct 22 / 201312 songs, 51m 1s96%
Art Pop Indietronica Alt-Pop
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POLIÇA return with their second album ‘Shulamith’, the follow up to 2012’s universally acclaimed breakthrough debut ‘Give You The Ghost’. It is set to be released 21st October on Memphis Industries. First, a little recap for you. Founded by vocalist Channy Leaneagh and producer Ryan Olson out of the ashes of Minneapolis collective Gayngs, and featuring Drew Christopherson, and Ben Ivascu on drums and Chris Bierden on bass and backing vocals, POLIÇA’s ‘Give You The Ghost’ was released in April last year. Seemingly from nowhere it became one of 2012’s standout debut albums. They made their UK live debut in June 2012, with two packed nights at the tiny CAMP Basement in London, and less than a year later, March 2013 saw the band play a triumphant show to a sold out Shepherd’s Bush Empire. With US TV performances on Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel plus their UK TV debut on Later with Jools Holland under their belt, and having toured all four corners of the globe, including appearances at Coachella, Latitude, SXSW, the xx’s Night + Day event, the band found time in late 2012 to forge ahead with recording their second album. Born then, out of a tumultuous, head spinning 18 months, the album is named in homage to pioneering feminist activist and thinker Shulamith Firestone. Channy explains: “Her ideas and written word are hugely important to me and she is my muse and my mentor from the grave. I want people to know about her. Also Shulamith means peace and that is a good word for any band to put above their door for a few years.” Musically, ‘Shulamith’ demonstrates an increased mastery and extension of the unique sonic palette that POLIÇA mined on their debut album. The recording process was naturally a more collaborative process than their debut, with the band reacting to and working off Olsen’s beats, drawing on elements of modern R&B, electronica, dub and the extreme metal scene’s use of blast beats to create a sound that, already, this early in their career, is uniquely and identifiably their own. Leaneagh’s continued exploration of, and increased control over the effects processor to manipulate and enhance her already outstanding voice take her vocals to new and unusual heights. 'Tiff' was the first track to see light of day, in April of this year, and coupled with a startlingly intense video, it sets the tone for an album where unflinching emotional, sometimes violent, sharp-eyed lyrical self-exploration is articulated via enticingly brooding R&B inflicted electronic pop. From the flurry of warped metallic synths and razor-sharp groove of opener ‘Chain My Name’ with it’s stark and rushing refrain, the angular R&B-pop futurism of ‘I Need $’, its sweetly earworm hook belying lyrics of alternately helplessness and defiance, to the gliding, birds-eye meditation of closer ‘So Leave’, 'Shulamith' reaffirms Poliça as one of the most fascinating and vital groups in forward-thinking pop. Ultimately, Channy succinctly sums up the ideas and themes behind Shulamith, and POLIÇA as follows: “Drums. Bass. Synths. Me, Women”.

7.5 / 10

The Minneapolis electro-pop band Poliça's second album, Shulamith, is named for late feminist writer Shulamith Firestone, whom vocalist Channy Leaneagh has called her “mentor and muse from the grave.” The collection clears away some of the haze of the band's 2011 debut, while maintaining its predecessor's bleak depths.

8 / 10

An album that possess the same power as its much-lauded predecessor, albeit in a very different way.

8.2 / 10

Last year’s debut from Minneapolis indie-electronica band Poliça thrived in the interplay between the band’s equal and…

This month's album releases reviewed by the Evening Standard's music critics

Check out our album review of Artist's Shulamith on Rolling Stone.com.

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The songs on Poliça's acclaimed debut Give You the Ghost flowed into each other in a blur of feelings and sounds that evoked the Cocteau Twins working with a cutting-edge 2010s R&B producer.

8 / 10

With their follow-up, Shulamith, the quintet find themselves drifting further back into denser territory, using '90s trip-hop and millennial British chill-out as starting points for their newfound sleek and steely sound.

7.0 / 10

Experimental pop outfit Poliça returns with the unsettling Shulamith, replete with grisly cover art and the video for "Tiff," which indulges in a twisted self-torture scene with singer Channy Leaneagh.

6 / 10

Album review: Clash bends its critical ear the way of 'Shulamith', the second album from celebrated synth-pop crew Poliça

8 / 10

Poliça’s Shulamith is a much more cohesive and self-assured effort than the band’s debut.

7.0 / 10

"Shulamith" The new album from Polica reviewed by Adam Williams. "Shulamith comes out on October 22nd via Mom+Pop/Memphis Industries on October 22nd.

There's perhaps too much aural clutter around Channy Leaneagh's slinky soul vocals, but Poliça's second album is still a beautiful thing, writes <strong>Harriet Gibsone</strong>

Album Reviews: Poliça - Shulamith