New Music Reviews: Titanic, Sault, and Julianna Barwick and Mary Lattimore

It’s an especially eclectic bunch this week – the ambient collaboration of Julianna Barwick and Mary Lattimore, the funk of Sault, and Titanic’s concise progressive rock.

Julianna Barwick and Mary Lattimore

Tragic Magic

2026, 8.5/10
Harpist Mary Lattimore and vocalist/producer Julianna Barwick are a natural pairing – both make pretty music. For their collaborative album, they were given access to the instrument collection of Philharmonie de Paris’ Musée de la Musique. It’s beautiful, with choral vocals, ambient loops, and delicated stringed instruments.

Just walking up to the Philharmonie every day, this sparkling silver structure, where we could go into it and record in the Museum of Instruments – it was dazzling. Our engineer, Trevor Spencer, had the greatest ideas and was so respectful. In my eyes, it could not have been more magical. We even loved our hotel! We were obsessed with the breakfast there.

Julianna Barwick, In Conversation

Despite the consistently gorgeous atmosphere, the individual songs cut through. There’s a lovely cover of Vangelis’s ‘Rachel’s Song’, from the Blade Runner soundtrack, while they also take on Roger Eno’s ‘Temple of Winds’. ‘Stardust’ stands out with its intensity, while ‘Four Sleeping Princesses’ is delicate and beautiful.

Tragic Magic is exquisitely gorgeous, an early 2026 favourite.

Titanic

Hagen

2025, 8.5/10
Mabe Fratti’s Sentir Que No Sabes was one of my favourite albums of 2024. On Hagen, the Guatemalan-born cellist and vocalist works with her romantic and creative partner, Hector Tosta. Titanic is largely Tosta’s project , and he steers the duo toward progressive territory – Fratti explained to Pitchfork that “Héctor’s chords are super sophisticated—expensive.” Meanwhile, Tosta describes Fratti in glowing terms, “she plays cello like a devil and she sings like an angel.”

The songs are short but often complex and packed with ideas. When the simple riff hits at the end of ‘Lágrima Del Sol’, it’s unexpectedly straightforward. The single ‘La Dueña’ starts with avant-garde cello before it turns into a soaring, operatic pop song.

‘La Trampa Sale’ is dramatic, with a commanding Fratti vocal, backed by piano and choral vocals. ‘Gotera’ is a fascinating arrangement, with little beyond the cello and spasmodic, clattering percussion.

Hector: I love going to karaoke in Mexico and of course people are always singing so many old bangers, and I always thought that it might be fun to have that kind of song in our repertory. Saying that I really tried to write the lyrics according to a broken heart from the ’60s. It just was super fun and it was super cool to put a distorted cello on it.
Mabe: This, for me, is like a Rocío Durcal song! But metal. 

Titanic, on La dueña

You might not recognise her name, but Mabe Fratti is making great music right now.

Sault

Chapter 1

2026, 6/10
Sault’s thirteenth (!) album features legendary producers Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis. It’s lovely to hear from the two legendary producers, although production wasn’t necessarily what Sault needed to break out of their slump.

Chapter 1 works musically, but Sault’s lyrical pettiness is becoming wearisome. The collective used to sing about black rights and self-empowerment, but now they’re preoccupied with accusations and business deals. It’s fine when they’re singing platitudes like ‘God, Protect Me From My Enemies’. But when they delve into specifics on ‘Chapter 1’, it feels more like a tired reprise than a fresh chapter.

Living in your head ’cause the rent is cheap
And you count your problems before you go to sleep

Chapter 1 is too lyrically predictable to live up to past triumphs, even if it’s often musically strong.

Read More


4 Comments

  1. That’s quite an intriguing set, Graham. All artists are new to me. Based on my initial impression, I like all of your picks! Perhaps my early favorite is “Tragic Magic.” Julianna Barwick and Mary Lattimore sound stunning. I also like the groove in Sault’s music.

    • Yeah, it is a pretty obscure week. I’d never heard Lattimore or Barwick before, and I only clued into Mabe Fratti with her previous album. I have been doggedly following Sault through 14 albums though…

  2. Sault…apart from what you said…this does have one hell of a early seventies groove…I like it.
    Julianna Barwick and Mary Lattimore…thats a combination I’ve never really heard. I didn’t think I would like it but I did.

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

The New Pornographers Album Reviews

Canadian indie pop band The New Pornographers took their name...

Spirit Album Reviews

Los Angeles teenagers Randy Wolfe, bassist Mark Andes, and vocalist...

The Raincoats Album Reviews

The punk and new wave movements lowered the barriers to...

Pixies Album Reviews

New Zealand is a lovely country, with lots of sheep...
Pixies Trompe Le Monde

Syd Barrett Album Reviews

Syd Barrett was the creative force behind the original Pink...

Jenny Lewis Album Reviews

When Jenny Lewis released her first solo album in 2006...

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

More blog posts

10 Best Dave Dobbyn Songs

If you’re not from Australasia, chances are that you’re not...

XTC: Albums Ranked from Worst to Best

Swindon’s XTC formed in the early 1970s, initially playing glam...
XTC Drums and Wires

10 Best Paul Simon Songs

Paul Simon’s songs are part of the American landscape, a...

Carry Me Home by AC/DC: Great B-Sides

It’s a long way to the top (if you wanna...
AC/DC Let There Be Rock

10 Best Songs by The Waterboys

When Mike Scott formed The Waterboys he was the group’s...

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.