SONDRE LERCHE - PLEASE - CD
J**Z
I love Sondre Lerche
I love Sondre Lerche. I have all his U.S. Albums. I really like this one too but just not as much as Heartbeat Radio. That one is my absolute favorite.
S**A
Best Played on a Never Ending Loop
This feels like Sondre Lerche's most personal album and while it is easy to get caught up in the gorgeous melodies and fun personality of the songs, the lyrics will catch you up and force you to listen with relatable emotions and vulnerability.
K**N
Five Stars
Sondre never fails to deliver. An album with punch, crunch and a heart.
G**H
Five Stars
Another incredible album by Sondre Lerche from start to finish.
V**A
Lerche Experiments with Success
Starting off the album is "Bad Law." It's a bouncy number narrated by a career criminal with a nasty past, foolishly rationalizing his dirty deeds from a prison cell, only to stumble inadvertently upon a profound question in the song's chorus. What follows is a funky eco-friendly number, Crickets," so innocuous and beguiling that it would not offend your most diligently reactionary friends. With "Legends," could it be that Sondre is mocking Coldplay and its royal couple of Martin and . . um, who is it this week? Nah, that's just my imagination working overtime. On "Lucifer" Sondre takes on the US's fascination with evil, and from his characteristically Scandinavian perspective, he like Björk is not that impressed. I was incorrect in my initial review of this album: it is "After the Exorcism" in which he channels David Bowie, with a notable diamond-in-the-rough melodicism "At a Loss for Words" is a lengthy and trenchant reflection on defeat. On "Lucky Guy," Sondre's letting us know he can still deliver a powerhouse pop number reminiscent the Beatles or Harry Nilsson; perhaps he is paying homage to colleague Rufus Wainwright as well. "Logging Off" is another of Sondre's intensely inscrutable album's-last-song, which might take some time for me to piece together. Indeed, the heart of the album is a number at the album's middle, unlikely titled "Sentimentalist," which contains THE most stunningly beautiful chorus, conjuring up soundtracks of sundry classic French and Italians films of the 1950s and -60s.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 days ago