Significantly more expansive that 2011’s broken yet undeniably heartfelt
Breakers, due in large part to the fact that it was birthed in a proper studio and not in singer/songwriter/pianist Christopher Barnes bedroom,
In Roses, the second long-player from the Boston chamber pop trio
Gem Club, blends the methodical, melancholic simplicity of the
National and the slow ache of
Tom Odell with the evocative orchestral Icelandic hymns of
Sigur Rós. This is laptop pop writ large, and Barnes' choked, Antony Hegarty-meets-Chris Martin delivery pairs well with Magik Magik Orchestra string arranger Minna Choi's tasteful orchestral emissions, with highlights arriving via the epic "First Weeks" -- a lush, two-chord meditation on loss that feels like it was built out of rescued incidental music from a Cameron Crowe film -- the spectral "Ideas for Strings," and the ephemeral closer "Polly." As a collection of unabashedly melodramatic, dear-diary poetic, and tastefully lush happy/sad dream pop anthems,
In Roses delivers the goods with the sort of restrained panache that’s sure to win over the NPR crowd. ~ James Christopher Monger