
Harcourt has always been very skilled at combining bouncy melodies with darker wordplay, and his new long-player displays this. Co-produced by Ryan Hadlock (The Gossip), Lustre is lush, sweeping and beautifully structured, with three-part harmonies courtesy of The Langley Sisters (made up of Harcourt’s wife and her sisters) and handclaps accompanying his piano-led songs. Considering the lyrics deal with subjects such as life in a mental asylum and a stern view of religion, it is a fascinating juxtaposition, and brings to mind Costello and Cohen. Elsewhere, more of the British troubadour’s slightly optimistic demeanour is evident on Heart of a Wolf - a playful, Tom Waits-style knockabout - and on the jaunty A Secret Society.
Even in the album’s weaker moments - and there are a few - Harcourt’s words are always poetic and delivered with honesty and passion. Regardless of whether he is singing through a smile or a frown, Lustre signals a welcome return for this underrated songwriter.