Lily Rae lit up 2018 when her band, Fightmilk, released their debut album ‘Not With That Attitude’. Now, she is striking out on her own under the moniker Captain Handsome. Today, she releases her debut EP ‘I’m Not An Animal’ via Reckless Yes.
Themes of both, light and dark, permeate the best work here. On ‘Annalise’, the ambition of The Decemberists ‘The Crane Wife 3’ hooks up with the raw pop prowess of Kid Harpoon’s ‘Late For The Devil’ as, Rae delivers bubble wrapped gift of beauty and melancholy.
Earlier this month, she put out ‘Halloween’ (full review here) as the lead single. The sinister strings build so much tension they should come with an anxiety warning, that is, until the release of the last chorus. What was once Rae’s deluge of sadness, becomes triumphant, an amusing footnote in a life clearly turned around.
Though ‘Halloween’ has a cathartic feel, ‘Dolly Parton’ lands you right into the mire. It’s soul crushing all-night vigil for one. Through the stunning orchestration and, Rae’s sublime Kirsty McColl-esque vocals, she explores a painstaking night home alone pondering poor choices.
On the title track, McColl’s inspiration again looms large. However, she goes much further and heightens her sense of fragility. So much so that, it allows both beauty and danger to circulate like angels and demons. Although the song builds like an epic Embrace single, its awkwardness, lends itself to the introverted brilliance of Frank Black and Graham Coxon.
This is, with perhaps the exception of ‘I Wish I Had a Dog’, a masterful EP. Whist we all break at times, Captain Handsome show how to plummet and, then recover!