Dehd: Poetry review – a sparkling dialogue with rock’n’roll history

Dehd: Poetry review – a sparkling dialogue with rock’n’roll history

(Fat Possum Records)
The Chicago trio go back in time and dip into big-chorused Americana, slacker indie and vintage soul – all with real feeling

Chicago rock band Dehd’s music is two things: mercilessly catchy and meticulously camp. The trio’s biggest hit to date – 2022’s Bad Love – was a smoke machine-fogged rush of instant-singalong glam. Now, their fifth album arrives in a swirl of bratty pop-punk: opener Dog Days’ stop-start guitars accompany pouty playground-chant lyrics dripping with teenage melodrama. Later, they turn to sweeping, big-chorused Americana (Hard to Love), combine slacker indie and vintage soul for the irresistible Mood Ring – a sleazy, cheesy tale of unexpectedly reciprocated lust – and, on Necklace, cleverly meld country and grunge, the exaggerated scuzz offsetting sugary-sweet melodic hooks.

Contemporary guitar music is in constant, unavoidable conversation with the past, and Dehd inject a lot of fun into this dialogue. There’s a knowingness in the band’s dressing-up-box approach to genres past, and a distance, too; Poetry often feels as if it has a sepia filter (it comes as little surprise to find Whitney’s Ziyad Asrar on production duties; a band who helped pioneer this kind of faux-retro feel).

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