As they've gained acclaim for the way they teeter between experimental music and indie pop,
Micachu & the Shapes haven't made any concessions. If anything,
Good Sad Happy Bad suggests that the trio might be incapable of making them. The projects
Mica Levi pursued between 2012's
Never and this album, like her award-winning
Under the Skin score and her production work on her friend Tirzah's left-field pop EPs, have had more scope and more potential mainstream appeal; meanwhile,
the Shapes remain as uncompromising as ever on
Good Sad Happy Bad, a title that suggests the collision of sounds and feelings in these unpredictable songs. The album's roots lie in a jam session that drummer Marc Pell recorded without telling
Levi or keyboardist
Raisa Khan, and the finished product keeps that spontaneity. More than ever,
Micachu & the Shapes are unconcerned with embellishments that could get in the way of capturing the moment;
Levi's gritty, nasal voice is as piercing and artless as a gull's caw on "Sea Air." Several of
Good Sad Happy Bad's songs echo the brilliant way
Levi used just a handful of notes to craft
Under the Skin. The eerie "Waiting" could be a pop interpretation of that score, with little more than a simple keyboard line decorating the space between
Levi and the object of her affection as she mutters "you're holding someone too much." This kind of emotional clarity elevates the album's best moments, whether on the Jewellery-esque whimsy of "Dreaming" or "Suffering," a wry expression of the detached self-awareness that runs through much of
the Shapes' music. Meanwhile,"O Baby," a haunting mix of hip-hop, soul, and dub that sounds cobbled together from vintage samples (but isn't) and "LA Poison," a reverie where
Levi imagines "A place where the cars and people are equal/And they move around each other like lovers/Crashing colliding/Smiling and dying" prove that
the Shapes are capable of moments of striking, unsentimental beauty that provide new vantage points on timeless feelings. ~ Heather Phares