Album Reviews

Haley Bonar: Impossible Dream

Noiseland LP GATEFOLD Sleeve

Haley Bonar
Impossible Dream
(GNDWIRE/Thirty Tigers)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

Many artists work in more than one specific sound, but introspective singer-songwriter Haley Bonar has an entirely different name for her more raucous side. In Grammaโ€™s Boyfriend, she unleashes the punky edge of music that lurks inside of her. The side-project allows the indie/folk-rock side to be fully explored in her solo projects. So itโ€™s no surprise that the first single on her sixth album under her own moniker is titled โ€œI Can Change.โ€

On Impossible Dream Bonar borrows some of the new-wave ’80s stylings from Boyfriend, injecting them into her more personal musings. While itโ€™s unlikely she will abandon the former outlet, the combination of a more driving approach, somewhat like the quieter side of Echo and the Bunnymen mixed with early New Orderโ€™s bubbling darkness, proves immensely successful on these 10 tight tracks, none over four minutes, all totaling a conservative half hour.

The lush waves of strumming, echoed guitars hovering over Bonarโ€™s sweetly seductive/innocent vocals on the opening โ€œHometown,โ€ a melancholy rumination about never being able to leave your roots regardless of how far you travel, introduces a set that generally sticks to that template. There are occasional flashes of spikey, U2 styled reverbed guitar, especially on the driving โ€œKismet Killโ€ and the pulsating โ€œCalled You Queen.โ€ The latterโ€™s lyrics provide the album with its name over music propelled by swirling keyboards and a sweet/sassy vocal attack that provides an edge to even the quietest tracks.

Thereโ€™s a sublime sense of mystery and understanding to songs such a โ€œSkynzโ€ where Bonar sings โ€œHistory is nothing but a memory/ From someone paid to write it,โ€ words, like many on this album, that tend to get overshadowed by the layered, full production and memorable melodies that wash over you. In that sense, Bonarโ€™s voice becomes another instrument in the mix, swirling within music that feels natural, organic and fully formed.ย  When one of the discโ€™s finest and most hypnotic tunes, the instantly hummable โ€œBetter than Me,โ€ appears nearly hidden away as track #9, you know this is a songwriter who has, over the course of a 15 year, generally under-the-radar career, found her groove and between this and 2014โ€™s Last War, might just now be peaking.

Occasionally the sound can get a bit monochromatic. But co-producer/multi-instrumentalist Jacob Hanson keeps Bonarโ€™s voice โ€” similar to that of Britta Phillips — up front. And these songs are so powerfully melodic, itโ€™s difficult not to get swept into the world of an artist who is more than ready for her time in the spotlight.