HAIM – Women in Music Part III: New Music Review

HAIM’s first two records were fun. The trio of L.A. sisters had great harmonies, their eclectic approach recalled both Fleetwood Mac and 90s R&B, while Danielle Haim’s bluesy guitar added some edge. Their third record, however, is the biggest leap forward from any band I’ve heard this year.

It was signalled early – 2019 singles like ‘Summer Girl’ and ‘Now I’m In It’ showed a band with more interesting arrangements and more distinctive songwriting voices. On WIMP3 these singles are pushed out to bonus tracks, but the record’s so full of great material that it’s not even an issue.

Some of the lyrics on Something To Tell You we’re merely generic placeholders. Here the lyrics are grittier and sexier – on standout track ‘Gasoline’, Danielle sings “I wanna get off\But you’re such a tease” in a metaphor that’s too blatant to qualify as a double-entendre. Songs like ‘Summer Girl’ are much more emotionally charged than anything previous; in this case a vow from Danielle to support partner and producer Ariel Rechtshaid through a brush with cancer.

With Danielle, Rechtshaid, and Rostam Batmanglij all involved in production, the record sounds great. It’s comparable to Vampire Weekend’s last two albums, but HAIM’s different set of influences gives it a distinctive flavour. There’s some surprising diversity here – the 1990s R&B tribute of ‘3am’, the reggae guitar and Mariachi trumpet of ‘Another Try’, and the raw acoustic ‘Man From The Magazine’ are three obvious examples – yet the production crystallises these songs into a unified whole. The trio’s vocals sound great as well – Este’s keening voice and Alana’s gentle tones both add personality to the mix.

Even though it feels more substantial than past HAIM albums, WIMP3 still floats by happily with its pretty tunes. Effervescent pop/rock like ‘Don’t Wanna’ and ‘The Steps’ would have been standouts on their precious records. The standout though is advance single ‘Now I’m In It’, with its glistening electronic feel. Playing the record on repeat, ‘Summer Girl’ ends the record on the same trumpet lick that ‘Los Angeles’ starts with.

WIMP3 is an excellent record, upgrading HAIM from charming newcomers to artistic heavyweights.

Read More

13 Comments

  1. Sounds really good. The drums remind me of a touch of Levon Helm…the vocals really add to the hook.

Leave a Reply

Read about the discographies of musical acts from the 1960s to the present day. Browse this site's review archives or enjoy these random selections:

More review pages

Split Enz Album Reviews

Formed by a group of Auckland students in 1972, Split...
Split Enz Mental Notes

The Front Lawn Album Reviews

Growing up in Auckland’s North Shore, Don McGlashan and Harry...

The Police Album Reviews

English trio The Police released their first album in 1978...

Lauryn Hill Album Reviews

Lauryn Hill was born and raised in New Jersey. She...

Punk and New Wave Miscellany

These punk and new wave artists are covered briefly below:...
Buzzcocks Singles Going Steady

Run-DMC

Run-DMC emerged early in the development of recorded hip hop...

I add new blog posts to this website every week. Browse the archives or enjoy these random selections:

More blog posts

Great B-sides: Under the Ivy by Kate Bush

Kate Bush‘s 1982 album The Dreaming was excellent, but it...
Kate Bush The Hounds Of Love

ABBA: Albums Ranked from Worst to Best

In November 2021, ABBA released their ninth studio album Voyage...

10 Best Fairport Convention Songs

Bassist Ashley Hutchings and rhythm guitarist Simon Nicol formed Fairport Convention in...
Fairport Convention Unhalfbricking

Simon & Garfunkel Albums: Ranked from Worst to Best

Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel started their recording career as Tom...

10 Best Songs by Can

Classically trained pianist Irmin Schmidt and music teacher Holger Czukay...

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.