British alt-pop band Flawes has unveiled their electric new EP Reverie, and it plays like a dream.

Eclectic vibes and roaring undertones of colours and emotions that bubble within the listener, their songs are a reminiscence of a great effervescent gig.

Positivity and perseverance are two traits that stand proud throughout Flawesโ€™ recent singles “Higher Than Before”, “Whatโ€™s A Boy To Do” and “Holding Out For The Win”. Theyโ€™re also characteristics that the alt-pop trio have displayed in abundance. Their creativity and determination is now rewarded as they release their long-awaited new EP Reverie.

The project started during the initial lockdown, with each band member working remotely with producers including Toby Scott (Gorgon City, Pet Shop Boys). The result is โ€˜Reverieโ€™, a collection that packs fresh invention, irrepressible live energy and a sunshine shot of optimism just when itโ€™s needed the most.

Frontman JC Carruthers says,ย 

โ€œWhen thereโ€™s so much stuff going on in the world, this EP can help you escape for thirty minutes. In that small way, it feels really empowering. Iโ€™m generally a very optimistic person and my glass is always half full, but when Iโ€™ve got stuff on my mind I can put it into a song and leave this world behind.โ€

The first new track โ€˜I Donโ€™t Quit For No Oneโ€™ offers a different mood to the bandโ€™s effervescent recent singles, as it moves from introspective verses into a textured, intricate production that echoes Massive Attack. Inspired by JCโ€™s dogged commitment to music, itโ€™s a motivational message of sticking to your ambitions regardless of what the doubters might say.

JC explains,

“Continuing the theme of the whole Reverie EP; โ€™I Donโ€™t Quit For No Oneโ€™ is an uplifting, self-empowering song, refusing to allow peoples negative opinions to get me down.ย The song looks ahead positively towards potential good times. Iโ€™m not going to quit no matter what anyone says or does.”

Flawesโ€™ aptitude for infusing their modernist edge with a throwback flavour is particularly striking in “Move Over”. Its layered autotuned vocal harmonies are entirely in tune with what forward-thinking pop can be in 2021, but itโ€™s contrasted with booming drums with an โ€˜80-styled gated reverb. Arguably the best is saved for last with “Against All Odds”. Itโ€™s a pure-hearted dare-to-dream reflection upon the challenges the band have faced, what they have achieved and what theyโ€™re primed to do next.ย 

As guitarist Freddie Edwards summarises,ย 

โ€œItโ€™s almost as if people donโ€™t recognise making music as an actual career. This is a song about trying to prove those people wrong.โ€

2020 was destined to be Flawesโ€™ year. The diary was packed: five shows at SXSW, a European headline tour and a summer schedule of main stage festival appearances. But not only are Flawes still here, but theyโ€™re thriving with their strongest set of songs to date. And thatโ€™s something worth celebrating with โ€˜Reverieโ€™.

With their previous releases โ€˜Lowlightsโ€™ and โ€˜Highlightsโ€™, Flawes has seen its music video for โ€œLook No Furtherโ€ added to rotation on Channel [V] Asia, VH1 India and VERY TV, along with numerous press features and radio pickups in the region. Their recent single “Higher Than Before”, released last month, earned a spot on Spotify’s New Music Friday playlists in 8 countries across Asia, and received attention from regional press.ย 

From here, the only direction the band can go is up.