Album Review: Fontaines D.C.’s Romance

Vibrant, eclectic and transportive, Fontaines D.C.’s fourth studio album Romance is a feat not only of music, but of worldbuilding. The record transcends their Irish rock past with a futuristic, cyber-punk sound, an aesthetic that takes it from a musical LP to an entire creative landscape – complete with artwork, cinematography and a wacky makeover to match.

‘Neon and ridiculous’ is how frontman Grian Chatten describes their new feel, and it’s true, you can’t miss them these days; guitarist Carlos O’Connell proudly sports a fluorescent pink and green hairdo, unrecognisable from the run-of-the-mill indie boys of first album Dogrel (2019). And this was exactly their intention. They’ve changed record labels (XL Recordings in place of Partisan), producers (picking up industry legend James Ford) and crafted a whole new look. In an interview with NME, Chatten talks about wanting to ‘render the audience sensitive’ to the band’s vision, an artistic instruction that requires engagement on all sensory levels. This meant taking inspiration from a plethora of abstract sources; The Cure, Japanese Manga classic Akira, the pearly-gates-macabre of America’s West Coast, James Joyce’s Ulysses, and ‘pigeons taking flight at dawn’, are just a few of the influences Chatten has accredited in interview. It’s ‘like playing a character’, he explains, looking to The Cure’s Robert Smith as an example of how eccentricity and weirdness elevates music beyond the studio. I agree, there’s something Bowie-esque in the way the band transforms onstage, leaving the smoke filled, industrial arenas of the UK for the technicolour, comic-strip playground of the album.

Romance’s first and titular track is moody and theatrical, repeating the line ‘maybe romance is a place’, an invitation into the album’s dystopian soundscape. We’re then taken on a journey, meandering between fast paced rocky tunes like ‘Bug’ and ‘Here’s The Thing’ to the more lowkey and intimate sound of shoegaze-y ‘Sundowner’ or ‘Motorcycle Boy’. Thematically, the album is dichotomous: bold and nihilistic with the emotional vulnerability of its rose-tinted title. The two most popular songs off the record, ‘Starburster’ and ‘Favourite’, released as singles during the spring of 2024 and generating buzz for the album drop, epitomise this duality. Where ‘Starburster’ is dramatic and moody, a verbal rampage over a thrilling bassline, ‘Favourite’ is achingly genuine, the brightest tune on the album, if not that I’ve ever heard. With a hint of The Cure again in its guitar riff straight out of ‘Just like Heaven’, the album’s final track is gorgeous, brimming with sunshine, generosity and summer evenings. 

For Chatten however, his biggest pride is undoubtedly in ‘In the Modern World’, conceding that ‘I always wanted to write that song but never knew how… a song that sounded like Lana Del Rey could maybe sing on it, you know?’. Whilst not my ‘Favourite’ (Ha-Ha) off the album, the song is an artistic masterpiece – hazy, existential, and full of that apocalyptic delusion that permeates the record.

Grian Chatten is teeming with poetry. He expresses himself – both in song and in interview – with a delicacy that demands attention for the matter-at hand. For Fontaines, this poeticism is combined with simple, abrasive lyrics (‘Shit shit shit’ goes the chorus of ‘Death Kink’) to give the band their appeal: saying really clever things, in a really cool way. The textured, cascading lyricism throughout Romance reminds me of fellow musician-cum-poet Adrienne Lenker (of Big Thief); a resemblance that makes his goal of publishing a poetry book tangible and exciting, rather than another glory quest by a celebrity that should have stuck to their day-job. In interview, Chatten is dry and sarcastic, joking about his own brilliance in a mockery of the rock-n-roll frontman. There is a comic irony to this, as he is often the lone member interviewed, with O’Connell, Curley, Deegan and Coll taking a more low-key role in the band’s PR. However, as he lapses back into a monologue about the desire to maintain creatively esoteric, and ‘humbly’ admits that writing is like stretching the legs, I do find myself enchanted by him. It might just be the fangirl in me, but I find there is a real poignancy to Grian Chatten’s voice, a truthful self-awareness, that albeit pretentious at times (but what rockstar isn’t?), could make him the voice of a generation.

Despite their willingness to trade in popularity for creativity on Romance, Fontaines D.C. have never seen more success, doubling the first-week sales of their third album Skinty Fia (2022) and debuting at #2 on the UK Charts. The band are currently on an almost sold-out global tour, complete with Finsbury Park, a Primavera headline, and most notably, a night at Leeds’s First Direct (3rd December, if you’re interested.)

Words by Madeleine Royle-Toone

Fontaines DC: Sonic Singles & Switching Singers

Written and edited by Millie Cain.

Do Fontaines DC ever sleep? Now onto their 4th album, following almost unbroken touring in the last few years, with another set to come this winter following their array of summer festival appearances, I can only wonder how they have the time. But, with new single ‘Starburster’ continuing to accelerate Ireland’s most vulnerable post-punk band, we evidently have much to look forward to with their upcoming album Romance.

Not to complain, as nearly everyone is in agreement that their upcoming album has potential to be their best work to date. Huge shoes to fill after the critical acclaim of Skinty Fia (2022), Fontaines DC cemented their place as the current powerhouse of their genre. If you, like me, haven’t been able to get the industrial, post production grit of new single ‘Starburster’ out of your head, then you’ll be holding out for a very high standard for their new record. Undeniably talented, unparalleled in their cult-like fanbase, bringing in new sounds and swapping member’s roles, I believe Romance could be the one. 

Notably, Fontaines DC have certainly spun onto a whole new marketing wheel, which begs the question, is it ironic or just cringe? For a band so self-aware, I can only presume we are seeing an acid green alt-pop characteristaion of ‘wet wipe’ artists, such as Yungblud, who are hyper fixated on a more childish, hyper-pop aesthetic. While a reach into far nu-metal is understandable, Chatten himself has cited an influence from Korn and a new bigger budget label pushing their releases, the Y2K style is questionable at best for a respected band in their 30s – but we can hold out hope for irony. 

I’m predicting the titular album track ‘Romance’ to hit us in June, with tinges of 90s Nick Cave and Depeche Mode seeping through, it’s clear they’re setting the score for the new album early doors. It’s likely we will see ‘Favourite’, a bright, jangly, shoegaze-esque number recently debuted at a show in Warsaw, Brooklyn to guide us through summer and into their late August album release with its looping guitar lines. The recently played new material has been devoured and rightly so. With bigger label XL recordings at their back, it is clear Fontaines DC are branching out and making changes for their new record.

Following Grian Chatten’s solo album Chaos For The Fly (2023), which was worked on a personal level and with his girlfriend Georgie Jesson supporting on some tracks, it has potentially given space for other members of the band to bring ideas of their own to the table. Guitarist Conor Curley is debuting ‘accidentally’ as lead singer for at least one album track, written by himself ‘Sundowner’; an exciting proposition after uncovering his previous own recordings on soundcloud (available here: https://soundcloud.com/conor-curley ), a great vibrato and jazz swing vocally could make for a really interesting switch in the song that has been described as an ‘ode to friendship’ by himself. Bassist Conor ‘Deego’ Deegan has also been stepping up with further influence, after finding love in Paris and taking time for personal growth, seemingly paid off with the addictive bassline on ‘Starburster’. One of which is a Ulysses reminiscent single ‘Horseness is the Whatness’ written by guitarist Carlos O’Connell, who has spent time producing for Peter Perrett, as well as becoming a father since the last album, and has brought in the mellotron heard on ‘Starburster’ and apparently building in strings for his album tracks. 

Other album tracks such as ‘Death Kink’ have been described as having ‘the ghost of Boys in The Better Land’ of Dogrel (2019) fame laid throughout. We’ll be surprised to see a more sensual tone to Chatten’s songwriting, something he openly admitted he ‘never had the confidence’ for and we will see in mid-album track ‘Desire’. But, fans of their previous work won’t need to worry too much – if the guitars on Romance are anything to go by, Fontaines DC aren’t altogether abandoning their Skinty Fia sound. Chatten’s songwriting isn’t something any fan can doubt, as a child, Chatten’s father bribed him with packets of football stickers to memorise poems – leading him to listen to and recite the likes of Bob Dylan and the Cure. In retrospect, he admitted even at a young age he was trying to reach beyond the banality of everyday life. One song especially, central track ‘In The Modern World’ appears to be a standout, questioning the spiralling of political strife and the detachment from capitalist society, along with ‘Here’s The Thing’, an anxious pitfall into an argument in between Chatten and O’Connell will certainly make for an interesting listen.

Chatten has admitted in interviews to having pulled influences for this album from Gorillaz and Blur, while fans speculate a delve into Prodigy and early Kasabian vibes on ‘Starburster’, the band have a vault of brilliant music to draw from. The band have been working with producer James Ford who has worked with these artists named, as well as the likes of The Last Shadow Puppets and Arctic Monkeys ( with Alex Turner himself being seen recently attending a Fontaines DC show in Brooklyn) there is sonic talent both in the studio and on stage for this record. 
Romance will be available on 23rd August 2024, you can catch them at Leeds Festival that very next weekend, or at First Direct Arena on 3rd December.