Michael Cragg 

Joan As Police Woman: Lemons, Limes and Orchids review – stripped back songs of love and loss

On her first collection of originals since 2018, Joan Wasser lets loose with an album of slinky vocals and live instrumentation
  
  

Joan As Police Woman
‘Delicately pondering life’s elemental truths’: Joan As Police Woman. Photograph: PR IMAGE

It’s been six years since US multi-instrumentalist Joan Wasser released Damned Devotion, her last album of new material. There have been stopgaps along the way – 2020’s playful Cover Two, featuring reworkings of songs by the likes of Prince and the Strokes, and a live album – but Wasser seemed to be playing for time. On this 12th album, she finally releases all that pent-up emotion, picking at love and loss in stripped back, nocturnal songs that calmly ebb and flow.

Eschewing the pop-leaning, retro-soul of 2014’s The Classic, and Damned Devotion’s lurches into funk, here Wasser focuses on live instrumentation and her versatile voice. On the lilting Full-Time Heist she slinks softly around a simple click beat and piano trills, while on the undulating highlight, Oh Joan, her high-wire falsetto slowly gives way to the sighed, repeated title of the chorus.

While the textures are often smooth, there are occasional ripples: The Dream, built around a loop of Wasser’s sighs, is eerily off-kilter, and Back Again flirts with R&B grooves. Overall, however, Wasser is happiest when delicately pondering life’s elemental truths, like a torch singer just about holding on.

Watch a video for Full-Time Heist by Joan As Police Woman.
 

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