Review

The Lumineers, Brightside, review: a sweet slice of Americana that will get right under your skin

The band are masters of catchy choruses that never stray into being corny

The Lumineers perform at the Audacy Beach Festival in December 2021
The Lumineers perform at the Audacy Beach Festival in December 2021 Credit: Getty

What is it that sets folk pop outfit The Lumineers apart from their peers? On the surface, they seem a fairly regulation Americana act. Rootsy, heartfelt yet understated, The Lumineers hold lyrical intelligence, emotional introspection, analogue instrumentation and old-fashioned flaws-and-all musicianship to be of higher value than trendy production or sonic effects.
Yet since they first broke through on US indie label Dualtone in 2011, all three of their albums have gone top 10 in the UK and top two in the US, with 2016ā€™s Cleopatra hitting the top spot on both sides of the Atlantic.

While most acclaimed and comparable contemporary Americana artists (such as Jason Isbell, Josh Ritter and the Lumineersā€™ gifted producer Simone Felice) have modest streaming figures and play clubs and theatres, The Lumineers have more than 13 million monthly listeners on Spotify and will start touring the UKā€™s arenas in February.

Their fourth album, Brightside, offers nine short and sweet songs about a precarious relationship. It clocks in at just 30 minutes and is over before youā€™ve almost got to grips with it. But it burrows under the skin, luring you back to explore the ambiguities of their beguiling miniatures.

Could The Lumineersā€™ secret be something as simple as choruses? Their breakout hit, Ho Hey, was all chorus, a rambunctious singalong that swept them from the indie circuit to the Grammy awards in a few dizzy months. They were perceived as Americaā€™s answer to Mumford & Sons, but pursued a more intimate musical path, shedding members to boil down to the core songwriting partnership of guitarist-vocalist Wesley Schultz and drummer Jeremiah Fraites. But they never relinquished their affection for a big, meaty, singalong chorus, and Brightside is full of them.

A.M. Radio starts out as an introspective recollection of a volatile relationship set to a delicately picked guitar, the mood high-strung and pessimistic. But with a boom-boom of the bass drum, the chorus arrives to pledge eternal devotion: ā€œAs long as you run, I couldnā€™t give you up.ā€

Brightside by The Lumineers album art
Brightside by The Lumineers album art Credit: Press Handout

Where We Are depicts the aftermath of a near-fatal car crash as a metaphor for doomed love, but the chorus finds the duo carousing like battered but undefeated fans at a sporting event (ā€œWhere we are / I donā€™t know where we are / But it will be OK!ā€).

Throughout the album, an accretion of sharply observed lyrical details depict a devoted couple in crisis ā€“ ā€œWe gathered round / Your house burned down / As you held a garden hoseā€, Schultz sings on Birthday ā€“ but the innate bonding of singalong choruses offer alternative perspectives (ā€œItā€™s all right, itā€™s all right, itā€™s your birthday, dearā€). ā€œLove was not designed for timeā€, he laments on Never Really Mine, yet Schultz is still ā€œheading for the bright side, babyā€ on closing track, Reprise.

The tension and ambiguity implicit in downbeat songs with upbeat choruses lies at the heart of an album that may not easily yield its secrets but will keep you singing as you try to work them out.


Brightside by The Lumineers is out now on Dualtone/Decca

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