Block - 'Love Crash'

7/10

After thirteen years without a new studio album, Block returns sounding reinvigorated, creatively fearless, and perhaps most importantly, completely himself. His new album 'Love Crash' finds one of New York’s most distinctive songwriting voices embracing everything that made his music resonate in the first place, all while delivering some of the strongest material of his career.

There has always been something refreshingly difficult to pin down about Block. Emerging from the fertile anti-folk scene that helped shape so much independent music that followed, his songwriting has long occupied a unique space between humour and heartbreak. And 'Love Crash' continues that tradition beautifully.

Across ten tracks, Block transforms personal upheaval into something surprisingly life-affirming. While the album is rooted in loss and emotional uncertainty, it never feels weighed down by its subject matter. There is an energy running through these songs that feels almost celebratory. Even in its darkest moments, 'Love Crash' remains animated by curiosity, resilience, and an unmistakable appreciation for simply being here.

The previously released singles hinted that something special was brewing. 'I Thought I Won The War' captured the album’s ability to find humour amid emotional wreckage, while 'Over And Over 'balanced vulnerability with infectious momentum. 'Firefly' offered a glimpse of the warmth and optimism that quietly runs through the record. But within the context of the full album, these songs reveal themselves as part of a much larger emotional journey.

In an era where so many reunions and returns feel driven by obligation, 'Love Crash' arrives with genuine purpose. It sounds like an artist reconnecting with the reasons he started making music in the first place and discovering that the creative fire still burns brightly.

Much more than a simple comeback, 'Love Crash' is a victory lap for authenticity itself. And here, Block has returned with one of the most engaging, heartfelt, and rewarding albums of his career.

More Reviews

EP: Com Truise - 'Wave 1'
12 years 4 months ago

8/10

ALBUMS OF 2013: Top 10-1
12 years 5 months ago

10. Savages – Silence Yourself

ALBUMS OF 2013: Top 20-11
12 years 5 months ago

20. Factory Floor – Factory Floor

ALBUMS OF 2013: Top 30-21
12 years 5 months ago

30. Laura Mvula – Sing To The Moon

ALBUMS OF 2013: Top 40-31
12 years 5 months ago

40. Ryan Hemsworth – Guilt Trips

ALBUMS OF 2013: Top 50-41
12 years 5 months ago

50. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Mosquito

EP: Memory9 - 'Red Falcon'
12 years 5 months ago

As one of dozens of new producers looking to make their mark on the world's electronic music stag

EP: Bipolar Sunshine - 'Drowning Butterflies'
12 years 6 months ago

When you first hit play to uber-hyped Bipolar Sunshine's latest EP 'Drowning Butterflies' there i