7/10
Across his prolific career, Brian Hazard (the creative force behind Color Theory) has treated electronic music as a vessel for emotional inquiry. And on his fourteenth studio album 'This Bright Circumstance', he distills that lifelong curiosity into a meditation on memory, mental health, and the fragile peace that comes from learning to live with your mind rather than against it.
Composed almost entirely on a single groovebox from the comfort of a couch, the album’s stripped-down production belies its emotional scope. Hazard’s precise and crystalline synth textures evoke the clarity of early Depeche Mode and Pet Shop Boys, yet the mood is deeply introspective rather than nostalgic. The beats pulse with intention, every sound placed as though it were part of a ritual to quiet the noise within.
At the heart of the album lies 'When I Can’t Remember You', a song that transforms personal grief into gentle instruction. Written in the shadow of his parents’ battles with Alzheimer’s, it functions as both love letter and survival guide, a way to leave breadcrumbs for connection in case memory fades. It’s devastating in its restraint as he learns to accept the pain, while letting the melody do the emotional lifting.
Elsewhere, tracks like 'The Rehearsal' and 'Stop Breathing' reimagine cognitive therapy as pop architecture; reframing panic, worry, and self-doubt into repeatable, hummable mantras. It’s cerebral music that never loses sight of warmth or melody.
'This Bright Circumstance' sits as a body of work that teaches us, note by note, how to stay present amid the static. Hazard has crafted a record that both sounds vibrant, and has a healing quality as well.
Color Theory's 'This Bright Circumstance' will be available to stream from the 17th October.