Blue Rev | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Alvvays |
Cover: | Blue Rev Alvvays.jpg |
Recorded: | October 2021 |
Genre: | |
Length: | 38:52 |
Label: |
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Prev Title: | Antisocialites |
Prev Year: | 2017 |
Blue Rev is the third studio album by Canadian indie pop band Alvvays, released on October 7, 2022, via Polyvinyl, Transgressive, and Celsius Girls. The album expands on the shoegaze influences from their previous albums, and received universal acclaim from critics.
Alvvays' second album, Antisocialites was released in 2017.[1] Afterwards, the band went on an extensive tour across North America and Europe, as well as often supporting the National on their tour dates.[2] They began writing songs for Blue Rev almost immediately after the release of Antisocialites, but several events occurred which delayed the progress of the album: a thief broke into lead singer Molly Rankin's apartment and stole a recorder with several demos contained on it, and the day after, a basement flood threatened to destroy all of the band's gear.[3] The COVID-19 pandemic then created further delays, with border closures preventing the band from rehearsing as a full group. They eventually reconvened in October 2021 in a studio in Los Angeles with producer Shawn Everett; they then went on to play all of Blue Rev front-to-back twice in a single day, with 15-second breaks between songs and a 30-minute break between full album takes.[3]
On June 21, 2022, a month before the announcement of Blue Rev, the band announced a 2022 tour of the US between October and November that year.[4] Blue Rev is named after Rev, a Canadian alcoholic beverage.[5]
"Pharmacist" balances the band's signature indie-pop sound with prominent shoegaze elements,[6] [7] including guitar distortion and "dreamy" vocals by Molly Rankin.[8] [9] Quinn Moreland of Pitchfork compared the song to My Bloody Valentine's Loveless.[10] Other musical influences include Morrissey and the Smiths ("Pressed"), Belinda Carlisle ("Belinda Says"), Teenage Fanclub, and Yo La Tengo.[11] The short story collection After the Quake by Japanese author Haruki Murakami inspired the lyrics of "After the Earthquake".
Blue Rev was announced on July 6, 2022, alongside the release of the lead single "Pharmacist".[12] The second single, "Easy On Your Own?", was released on August 10, 2022.[13] "Belinda Says" and "Very Online Guy" were released as a double single on September 22, 2022.[14] The final single, "After the Earthquake", was released on October 5, 2022.
Blue Rev received widespread acclaim from music critics upon its release. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, the album received an average score of 86, based on 15 reviews.
Reviewing the album for AllMusic, Tim Sendra declared that, "the songs are memorable and fun, the performances are inspired, and the production is varied and always interesting," and that "the result is a heavenly indie pop hit guaranteed to make their already besotted fans fall even more head over heels in love with the band." At NME, Will Richards concluded that the album, "stands as an ode to continuing to evolve despite obstacles, slowly honing and tweaking your craft, and keeping on moving." Ben Salmon of Paste wrote, "These are all top-shelf tunes, and they serve as evidence that Rankin and O'Hanley are among the best pop-song writers working today."
Writing for Pitchfork, Jeremy D. Larson claimed, "Alvvays came out with a record that finally is large enough to contain the band's splendor. Every song on Blue Rev is a feast, done up with effortless élan," alongside the publication awarding the album the "Best New Music" tag. Concluding the review for Clash, Bella Savignano called the album, "a magical, twisty excursion to a crossroads where the band simultaneously reflects on yesteryear and explores the turbulence of divergent realities." In Exclaim!, Alex Hudson stated that compared to its namesake, the album "feels less like a hyperactive buzz and more like the crushing hangover the morning after: chaotic, anxiously over-stimulated, and tinged with regretful melancholy."
Veteran critic Robert Christgau recommended the CD edition over streaming the album because of more clarity from the "shoegaze fuzz" he otherwise perceived, while noticing "how explicitly collegiate [the lyrics] were, situating Molly Rankin both culturally, in her devotion to aesthetic usages less staid than 'the lettered life' she once aspired to, and generationally, as the postgrads who populate her songs negotiate love lives they're seldom ready for".
The album won Alternative Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2023[15] and was shortlisted for the 2023 Polaris Music Prize.[16] "Belinda Says" was nominated for Best Alternative Music Performance at the 66th Annual Grammy Awards.[17]
Rolling Stone | The 100 Best Albums of 2022 | |||
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Exclaim! | Exclaim!s 50 Best Albums of 2022 | |||
The Guardian | The 50 best albums of 2022 | |||
The New York Times | Lindsay Zoladz's Best Albums of 2022 | |||
NPR | The 50 Best Albums of 2022 | |||
Paste | The 50 Best Albums of 2022 | |||
Pitchfork | The 50 Best Albums of 2022 | |||
Stereogum | The 50 Best Albums of 2022 | |||
Flood Magazine | Best Albums of 2022 | |||
Treble | The 50 Best Albums of 2022 |
Alvvays
Additional musicians
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Peak position | |
Australian Hitseekers Albums (ARIA)[18] | 6 |
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