Following the phenomenal successes of 2014's
In Return and 2017's
A Moment Apart, which both topped Billboard's Top Dance/Electronic Albums and remained on the chart for several years, electronic duo
ODESZA tried something different and teamed up with
Golden Features for a tech-house project called BRONSON. Darker and more stripped-down than the widescreen glitch-pop
ODESZA are typically known for, the collaboration seemed to reignite the duo's passion for dance music.
The Last Goodbye, the fourth
ODESZA full-length, isn't quite as club-focused as the BRONSON album, but the danceable tracks seem bigger and more anthemic (and not always as pop) than on the pair's past albums. This is particularly evident on tracks like "Love Letter," a long-gestating collaboration with
the Knocks, and the title cut, built around a mournful, wailing sample of soul icon
Bettye LaVette, from her 1965 song "Let Me Down Easy." Both are high-tech, festival-ready house tracks that build from the drama of their respective samples without getting too overblown. "Wide Awake" has the duo's familiar combination of yearning verses (by
Charlie Houston) and manipulated vocal refrains, but with more of a progressive house influence. Elsewhere,
Julianna Barwick opens the set with a meditative monologue, flowing into her own heavenly singing accompanied by rising synth arpeggios and strings. "Behind the Sun" skillfully incorporates samples of Iranian vocalist Simin Ghanem into a downtempo beat that soon develops into an epic march fit for the lead-up to a battle scene in a movie, with snare drums and horns conjuring images of swordplay.
ODESZA generally put at least one surefire radio bop on their albums, and "Forgive Me" (with
Izzy Bizu) would sound perfect coming on right after a
Lizzo single during the morning drive. "North Garden" has an
Avalanches-meets-
Beach Boys vibe, and sounds closer to the duo's chillwave-adjacent early style. "Equal," on the other hand, has a galloping, heart-racing beat and trancey synths pushing
Låpsley's striking "I just want our love to be equal" hook forward. The hard, skipping beat and fractured vocals of "I Can't Sleep" seem a little like a more
ODESZA-ized version of something that might've turned up on the BRONSON album. Finally,
Ólafur Arnalds provides plaintive,
Jason Molina-esque vocals while a prog-house beat develops and strings similar to those on the first track swell up, providing a full-circle moment when it all concludes with the sound of children's voices, like the album began. It would be difficult for
ODESZA to replicate the impact of the still-incredible
In Return, but
The Last Goodbye is a definite improvement over
A Moment Apart, which felt a bit too overcooked in retrospect. Here, they get the balance right, refining their sound without rehashing it, and trying new ideas without sacrificing their own character. ~ Paul Simpson