Christian Cohle: Holy Trouble – Don’t judge a book by its first three chapters

The Dublin electro-popper’s debut starts unremarkably, but soon shows promise

Holy Trouble
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Artist: Christian Cohle
Genre: Electronic
Label: Self-released

It’s true what they say about first impressions: they really do matter. So if you’d never heard any of Christian Cohle’s music and ventured into his debut album with no preconceptions or expectations, the first three tracks might well cause you to do a U-turn.

The Dublin multi-instrumentalist and electro-pop producer has been pitched as Ireland's answer to James Blake, but the clunky, dated 1990s production of Breathe, the slo-mo emotion of Ghost and the cheesy lyrics of the title track sound more like a sub-par version of Manchester duo Hurts at best.

Luckily, Cohle’s creativity and imagination take a necessary upturn for the remainder of the tracklist. The slow electronic patter of Drown Me Slow is eked out piece by piece, the icy experimentation proving a satisfying foil to Cohle’s soulful vocals.

The comparisons with Blake are more discernible on The Dying Sun, its syncopated synths cascading against a quaking squall of noise. Wallflower takes a similar approach, its dark undercurrent set against effects-laden synthpop, and the glitchy Pride is infinitely more danceable. Elsewhere, the moody ’80s tone of Blue Nights is almost too brazenly in thrall to an act like Anohni.

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This is an imperfect album, for sure, but there are some promising moments dotted throughout these 10 tracks that certainly make Cohle worthy of investigation.

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Lauren Murphy

Lauren Murphy

Lauren Murphy is a freelance journalist and broadcaster. She writes about music and the arts for The Irish Times