By: HERE News
It’s been nine long years since Charlotte’s heard the shimmering guitars and ethereal vocals of Molly Rankin and her Canadian dream pop band, Alvvays. The revered indie rockers performed for a sold-out crowd at The Underground on a drizzly Saturday night, and fans were treated to an onslaught of their whimsical brand of shoegaze-y rock.
The last time Alvvays performed in Charlotte, they were coming off their 2014 self-titled album and opening for The Decemberists. The debut was a lo-fi surfy jangle pop collection of post-adolescent songs featuring breakout hits like “Adult Diversion” and “Archie, Marry Me.” The album’s now widely considered an indie rock cult classic, along with their 2017 follow-up, Antisocialites. The releases solidified the band as darlings in the genre, with both albums short-listed for Canada’s prestigious Polaris Music Prize.
The album took nearly five years to complete, after some misfortunes (a theft, a flood, and of course, the pandemic), but there weren’t any setbacks Saturday night, as the Toronto quintet ripped through their 22-song set with ease and vigor.
Highlights from their set included the “Ugly Brunette” and “Orange Peeler” from their eponymous debut in 2017, and “Heartbreak Rules,” the title track of their latest album released through indie label, Run for Cover Records.
They kicked off with the distorted and spacey guitar of “Easy On Your Own?” from Blue Rev, before the somber but sugary lyrics Rankin has become renowned for: “Cause we’re always crawling, in monochromatic hallways / Dream we pull a one-eighty some day.” It was clear from the jump, from the echoing sounds swallowed by the packed crowd, it would be a night full of sparkling nostalgia-soaked rock.
Alvvays displayed their proficiency in performing their genre-curving style of The Smiths-influenced English rock-meets-psychedelic pop. With mini cameras projecting Rankin and band members into a kaleidoscope of scenic images behind them, the evening did feel very much dream-like.
With the faint noise of birds chirping and O’Hanley strumming the opening notes of “Archie, Marry Me?,” the energy in the room crested, as for most of the night, the audience was swaying in an enchanted trance of sound and color. The charismatic tune about a young couple considering eloping, written by Rankin and O’Hanley, has stood the test of time as an anthem for 20-somethings feeling societal and internal anxiety to marry. Immediately after “Archie,” the band wasted no time jumping right into “Pomeranian Spinster,” a rebellious and chaotic punk-influenced track about being more assertive and less conforming to the pressures of being “nice.” Following “Lottery Noises,” the group quickly filed in a line and exited the stage to rapturous applause.
Musically, on this night, Alvvays cemented themselves as humble giants in the realm of dreamy indie psychedelic-leaning pop rock. Hopefully, it won’t take another nine years before we get to see them again in the city.
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