They never broke through beyond a tiny but devoted audience, but the short-lived dream pop outfit
Denali released two swell albums' worth of moody, trip-hop-influenced indie rock that flirted with
Fugazi-style post-hardcore. Happily, the new trio
Glös is in many ways a
Denali reunion, but with its power balance shifted: the key figures in this band are multi-instrumentalist songwriters Keeley Davis (who'd played synth in
Denali) and Cornbread Compton (Davis' partner in the late emo stalwarts
Engine Down), with
Denali's lead singer and prime mover Maura Davis (Keeley's sister) helping with lyrics and vocals on songs that were almost entirely complete before she was drafted into the project. No matter: Maura's alluring vocals (think of
Portishead's
Beth Gibbons,
Blonde Redhead's Kazu Makino and the less shrieky side of
Deerhoof's Satomi Matsuzaki) remain the band's most appealing feature. Keeley takes close to half of the lead vocals for himself, however, which is a bit disappointing for hardcore
Denali fans but in no way lessens the album's impact. Shifting easily between aggressive post-hardcore riffing and atmospheric washes of near-abstract keyboard sounds,
Harmonium stays perfectly balanced between those two seemingly disparate styles. ~ Stewart Mason