Music Review: On Muna's ‘Dancing On The Wall,' desire and dread meet on the dance floor

News Room
By News Room 4 Min Read

Four years since their last project, Muna — the Los Angeles-based synth pop band composed of Katie Gavin, Naomi McPherson and Josette Maskin — has returned with their fourth album, “Dancing On The Wall.” Electric and urgent, the record tracks the emotional highs and lows of dating and desire under the palpable weight of the current political moment. The result isn’t escapist, but it’s still a party.

Album opener “It Gets So Hot” is about bodies in motion and sweat on the dance floor. The heat in question isn’t just figurative — it’s radiating from the Los Angeles pavement. “It gets so hot that I can’t even think straight / And she’s so hot when she’s putting on her makeup,” Gavin sings over a buoyant keyboard, synths creeping underneath. The writing is tight, the chorus booming, the production by McPherson — with those round, reverberating drums — recalling sound effects that might accompany a cable TV news flash.

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