Hana Vu’s “contemplative indie-pop captures the disillusionment of young adulthood,” writes NME. Her new LP Romanticism furthers that sentiment as a coming-of-age work that mourns the impermanence of youth and searches for meaning. The acclaimed LA-born songwriter’s been making music since high school, with a full-length debut and several EPs behind her of glowy, brooding anthems of abstraction and emotion. With previous work, Vu welcomed feedback as she went, but while crafting Romanticism, she shielded herself from outside opinion to preserve a singular vision. The result is a unified collection of songs aching with depth and intimacy. Lush and loud, the songs can feel both reminiscent of guitar-heavy late-aughts indie rock, and expansively futuristic in its layered synth bass. They pulse with meaning and jolt with playfulness, anchored by her powerful, sonorous voice and underscored by the record’s Romantic era-inspired artwork. “I’m just trying to convey my perspective as boldly as possible. To succinctly crystalize how it feels to be young, but also to be deeply sad.” Under Vu’s magnetic gaze, soaking up sadness has never felt so alive.
Tracklist:
01. Look Alive
02. Hammer
03. Alone
04. 22
05. Care
06. How it Goes
07. Dreams
08. Find Me Under Wilted Trees
09. Airplane
10. Play
11. I Draw a Heart
12. Love