Strangely Beautiful is
Club 8's best and most varied record to date. Their last album,
Spring Came, Rain Fell, found the group treading water for the most part -- the sound was there but the songs and the imagination were not. On this album, the band's trademark blend of soft indie pop guitars, perky dance beats, melancholy synthesizers, and sweet and innocent vocals remains intact, but
Johan Angergard, the chief architect of
Club 8's sound, seems to have spent some effort trying to expand their sound a little. The work pays off handsomely and the album sounds full of life and energy. Songs like "I Wasn't Much of a Fight," with its insistent rhythm, spunky vocals from the usually docile
Karolina Komstedt, and a very witty guitar line that quotes
Little Peggy March's "I Will Follow," or the best song on the record, "Saturday Night Engine," an
Angergard-sung dancefloor stomper that struts like
ABBA meets Northern soul and features their most exciting and original arrangement to date, bounce with a newfound sense of excitement and focus. Even the songs that sound like
Club 8 by-the-numbers -- such as the dreamy, melancholy "Cold Hearts" and the lilting "The Beauty of the Way We're Living" -- sound fresh. Maybe it is because
Angergard has written his strongest batch of melodies yet. Other tunes include "The Next Step You'll Take," with its chiming vibes and lovely vocals, or "This Is the Morning," a brief and brokenhearted acoustic ballad sung by
Angergard with
Komstedt's angelic whisper backing him. It is nice to see a band that had started to flag turn it around so strongly and release the best record of their career.
Club 8 fans and indie poppers should be overjoyed.