Damien Morris 

Hiatus Kaiyote: Mood Valiant review – their most coherent work yet

After a fraught 2020, things fall into place on the Australian band’s buoyant third album
  
  

Hiatus Kaiyote’s Nai Palm.
Hiatus Kaiyote’s Naomi ‘Nai Palm’ Saalfield. Photograph: Tré Koch

If you were trying to write the words for a sexy comeback song about the candied pleasures of the flesh, you’d probably avoid the mating rituals of the leopard slug. You are not, in that case, Hiatus Kaiyote. The Australian quartet kick off the track Chivalry Is Not Dead with some seductive musings about our mucus-dripping friends, then move on to seahorse sex, hummingbirds and batteries. Singer-lyricist Nai Palm (real name Naomi Saalfield) might not be taking her responsibilities entirely seriously – this is a band that have been long lauded for their inventive, chameleon-like R&B, rather than radio bait – but even without an obvious hit, there’s much to like about their third album.

Mood Valiant has been delayed by solo careers, the pandemic and Saalfield’s successful breast cancer surgery, but it’s the group’s most coherent work yet. All their little watermarks reappear. We get irregular time signatures, birdsong and other found sounds; long, wordless passages and tricksy skits; and an intoxicating confidence in their arrangements. Get Sun is a particularly sumptuous strings-and-horns high point, and it’ll be a tragedy if the band don’t get to share the hushed intimacies of Rose Water with a festival crowd before season’s end.

Watch the video for Get Sun by Hiatus Kaiyote
 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*