Being in a band with
Glen Hansard can't be easy. He's a magnetic frontman, the kind of musical black hole whose charisma and supersized vocals seem to suck the light out of everything else on-stage. As one half of
the Swell Season, though,
Markéta Irglová quietly held her ground, yielding the spotlight to her partner whenever he wanted it but rarely disappearing into the background. Now, with
the Swell Season on the back burner and her relationship with
Hansard downgraded to "friends only," she makes her solo debut with
Anar. Left to her own devices,
Irglová clings to a delicate mix of singer/songwriter piano tunes and adult contemporary ballads, most of which prize ethereality above genuine pop hooks. Brushed percussion and gobs of background vocals help beef up an otherwise sparse sound, and some of the better songs pit
Irglová's piano against a backdrop of thick, vintage-sounding horns. Even at its most ornate, though, this album never manages to bring its maker out of her introverted shell.
Irglová always worked well as a foil to
Glen Hansard --- she was the calm to his frenzy, the cool-down to his catharsis --- but she's too subdued on her own, and
Anar's pretty, gauzy ambience makes an impression without leaving a real impact. ~ Andrew Leahey