Hadsel | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Beirut |
Cover: | Beirut - Hadsel.png |
Alt: | A white image with a small depiction of the Hadsel Church in Norway in the center, with the band's name above and the title below |
Length: | 47:36 |
Label: | Pompeii |
Producer: | Zach Condon |
Prev Title: | Artifacts |
Prev Year: | 2022 |
Hadsel is the sixth studio album by indie folk band Beirut, released on November 10, 2023, through Pompeii Records, the band's own label.[1] Frontman Zach Condon wrote and produced the majority of the album himself.[2] The album was announced alongside the release of the lead single "So Many Plans".[3] It received positive reviews from critics.
The album is named for Hadsel Municipality in Norway, where Zach Condon traveled after canceling part of the band's 2019 tour in support of their previous album, Gallipoli, when he developed laryngitis.[4] He rented a cabin and was permitted to use the Hadsel Church's (depicted on the cover) organ, which is when he formulated the album. Condon stated that "the few hours of light would expose the unfathomable beauty of the mountains and the fjords, and the hours-long twilights would fill me with subdued excitement. I'd like to believe that scenery is somehow present in the music."[5]
Hadsel received a score of 82 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on nine critics' reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". Uncut stated that the album "sounds both ethereal and earthly", and Mojo found that as Condon sings "'It's not too late to find where you are,' [...] on The Tern", the album "seems to tremble on the brink of that revelation". Lewis Wade, reviewing the album for The Skinny, felt that the "songs are delivered with Condon's typically layered touch, his voice as yearning and ephemeral as usual. There are some new ideas, along with the aforementioned organ [...] but the palette will be dependably comfortable to long-time fans, and these songs fit snugly alongside previous material". Glide Magazines Ryan Dillon stated that "for 12 mind-altering tracks that lean on gentle ambiance to deliver warm tones and soaring melodies, Condon brings you to the moment right before the underdog gets the victory for an emotional rollercoaster of a comeback LP".[6] Ben Cardew of Pitchfork remarked that "the note of surprise on Hadsel [...] is not so much that Zach Condon has recorded an album on a remote Norwegian island with free access to a church organ, it's that he hasn't done so before", calling it "a new beginning for Beirut that sounds like old times, a record born of despair and solitude that still feels full of life".