Label: True Panther Records
Released: 6th December 2024
Babymorocco’s debut album ‘Amour’ exists in that sweet spot between sticky-floored basement raves and late-night Tumblr scrolling sessions. It’s a glitter bomb of millennial nostalgia that transforms bedroom daydreams into club reality, all wrapped in the kind of knowing wink that comes from someone who’s spent equal time studying pop charts and art manifestos.
Early track ‘Bikinis and Trackies’ lands like Justice gate-crashing a Saturdays recording session, its happy hardcore heart beating beneath pristinely polished production from Frost Children. The whole thing sparkles with deliberate artifice while managing to feel genuinely affecting. ‘Babestation’ could have been pure novelty, but Babymorocco’s delivery cuts through the irony to find something surprisingly tender.
Threading through the album is the story of British exchange student and aspiring dancer Jean-Paul. Though this character study occasionally gets lost amidst the strobe-light intensity of the production, that’s hardly a cardinal sin when the hooks are this sharp. When ‘Amour’ finds its groove, it captures something magical: pop that refuses to choose between intelligence and abandon.
What elevates the album beyond clever pastiche is Babymorocco’s evident affection for his source material: by wedding chav aesthetics to French house sophistication, he’s created something that feels both familiar and fresh. When it can be easy to mistake restraint for depth, ‘Amour”s unabashed maximalism feels like exactly what we need.
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