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The Orielles: Tableau review – cherry-picking genres to make a rich feast of musical ideas | Music

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The Orielles have always valued artistry over a quick buck. Having emerged from West Yorkshire in the 2010s as a trio of preciously talented teens, they are more interested in geeking out over niche recording techniques than in chasing chart success. Their old-school appeal has earned them a cult following entranced by their slow-burn evolution into a psychedelic jam band.

The artwork for Tableau

On their fourth album, Tableau, the exploratory, ambitious side of the band’s music has never been more clear. Many of the songs pick through various genres, magpie-style, subverting expectations: Honfleur Remembered is easy-listening R&B delivered with the light electronic touch of the French band Air, while the bassline of Airtight walks a line between frenetic funk and intergalactic hyper-pop. Likewise, The Room opens as a dance track, but immediately morphs into skittish indie, evoking the skinny-jeaned guitar bands of the 00s.

The darkly cinematic Beam/s, Tableau’s lead single, towers above the rest of the album. But even this song is sprawling and slippery at nearly eight minutes long, shifting from shoegaze to grunge to bubbling emo-electronica before, in its dying minute, settling on distorted, disorientating house.

Not everything is so dark: Darkened Corners offers a placid, Damon Albarn-esque consideration of the open-mindedness that has brought them to this point. “Is this a structure, or a pattern … knowing that anything can happen?” asks singer/bassist Esmé Hand-Halford. It’s a question and a temptation – who wouldn’t want to feast at a table so richly laid with ideas?


The Orielles have always valued artistry over a quick buck. Having emerged from West Yorkshire in the 2010s as a trio of preciously talented teens, they are more interested in geeking out over niche recording techniques than in chasing chart success. Their old-school appeal has earned them a cult following entranced by their slow-burn evolution into a psychedelic jam band.

The artwork for Tableau
The artwork for Tableau

On their fourth album, Tableau, the exploratory, ambitious side of the band’s music has never been more clear. Many of the songs pick through various genres, magpie-style, subverting expectations: Honfleur Remembered is easy-listening R&B delivered with the light electronic touch of the French band Air, while the bassline of Airtight walks a line between frenetic funk and intergalactic hyper-pop. Likewise, The Room opens as a dance track, but immediately morphs into skittish indie, evoking the skinny-jeaned guitar bands of the 00s.

The darkly cinematic Beam/s, Tableau’s lead single, towers above the rest of the album. But even this song is sprawling and slippery at nearly eight minutes long, shifting from shoegaze to grunge to bubbling emo-electronica before, in its dying minute, settling on distorted, disorientating house.

Not everything is so dark: Darkened Corners offers a placid, Damon Albarn-esque consideration of the open-mindedness that has brought them to this point. “Is this a structure, or a pattern … knowing that anything can happen?” asks singer/bassist Esmé Hand-Halford. It’s a question and a temptation – who wouldn’t want to feast at a table so richly laid with ideas?

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