Susanna Wallumrød's albums with and without
the Magical Orchestra (aka
Jaga Jazzist's
Morten Qvenild) have all taken a similar approach, whether she focuses on her own songs (
List of Lights and Buoys,
Sonata Mix Dwarf Cosmos) or the songs of others (Melody Mountain,
Flower of Evil): her subtly remarkable voice -- which carries within it echoes of singers from
Nina Simone to
Karen Carpenter -- came first and foremost, surrounded by abstract arrangements soft enough not to detract from her vocals, but interesting enough to enhance them. Often, she sounded like she was singing with the weight of the world on her shoulders, but on the simply named 3, she and
Qvenild sound like they're bound for the stars. Lighter and more overtly electronic than
Susanna & the Magical Orchestra's previous work, these songs have a sci-fi glamour and wistfulness to them, as well as a grandeur that suggests vast dark skies filled with twinkling lights. 3 begins with one of its boldest departures, "Recall," which sets
Wallumrød's voice adrift on bubbling analog synths, weaving a hypnotic spell broken by huge drums that sound all the more massive compared to the polite percussion on her previous work. "Palpatine's Dream" is even more striking, a song about Star Wars' Sith lord made sleek and strangely sexy with electronics that stream by like meteorites and backing vocals by
Wildbirds & Peacedrums'
Mariam Wallentin and
Susanna's brother
Fredrik Wallumrød. Not all of 3 is this drastically different than what came before it. Gently insightful songs like "The Game" and "Come On" could have appeared on
Wallumrød's earlier albums, and she includes a couple of covers that reinforce what a gifted interpreter she is:
Roy Harper's "Another Day" becomes a dead-of-night piano meditation, and
Rush's "Subdivisions" is turned into a sparkling, ironically detached manifesto against conformity. Throughout,
Wallumrød,
Qvenild, and company never lose the purity of their vision, particularly on "Lost," an aching ballad so simple and vulnerable it feels like a cover when it actually isn't, and "Someday," which blends the album's alien frostiness with all-too-human intimacy, hope, and despair. Ambitious and diverse, 3 opens new possibilities for
Susanna & the Magical Orchestra, but it shares the sense of wonder and beauty in all of their music. ~ Heather Phares