With A Bloodthirsty Bite, Luvcat’s Debut ‘Vicious Delicious’ Leaves A Scar


There is no day better for Luvcat’s debut release than Halloween. After all, Sophie Morgan Howarth has left her mark on the music world with a smear of red and leopard print, a lead woman who blends flirtatious cabaret with the rock ‘n’ roll deadliness of a natural-born killer.

Over the 13 tracks, Howarth spins her fishnet web, capturing tales of gore, lust, and fame with an aptitude for storytelling that many writers will envy. The ability to blend melancholy, metaphor, and melody creates a love letter to those who have ever fallen for the wrong person or never quite belonged. A letter naturally penned in blood.

‘Vicious Delicious’ throws us down a rabbit hole of subversion and debauchery with a beating heart clenched in one fist and a severed ring finger in the other.

From the seductive highs of ‘Lipstick, we fall to the dizzying lows of ‘Alien’. Backed by swelling instrumentals, the track laments the universality of not fitting in, balancing the fantasy of extra-terrestrials with the everyday feeling of not knowing where you belong.

Changing pace again, Howarth surrenders in ‘Matador’, blending the ruined innocence of smashed porcelain and flashes of red cruelty; the accompanying video encapsulates the thrill of the chase around a labyrinthian maze.

The macabre continues in ‘He’s My Man’, where Luvcat dons the lustful roleplay of the doting housewife who has a murderous secret. Joining the halls of figures like Love Quinn, Olivia Crain, and Lucille Sharp, the dreamlike confessional shows the dark side of devotion; “He wakes, head aches, funny taste to his tea / I want him to stay here forever / He’s happiest with me”.

The merry-go-round of deceit and debauchery continues to turn on ‘Spider’, a tale of the man you cannot trust, subverting the innocence of the music box with the darkness of insatiable and demolishing desire. The surge of staccato strings with Howarth’s echoing vocals creates the ghostly feel of spider legs down your spine.

The dizzying descent into madness is continued in ‘Emma Dilemma’, the erratic changes in instrumentals echoing how inescapable villainy of women can be. In this instance, perhaps deserved—after all, she’s got “Two fellas caught in her fishnet web”.

What’s so great about the album is its relatability. It may hide behind a fantastical world of gothic grandeur, but at its heart, it’s raw and real. From the Liverpudlian landmark honoured in the shadowy interlude of  ‘The Kazimier Garden’ to the naive insecurities that come to the surface in ‘Blushing’ alongside tableaus of McDonald's and Ferris wheels, the last quarter of the album faces the horrors of the everyday.

A true standout on the album is the melancholic ‘Laurie’, verbalising the ‘what ifs’ that run through a heartbroken mind, from what happens if the end comes before reconciliation to the “Do I really need to die to see if you cry?”. The piano and guitar guided by Thomas James Fripp make the touching subject matter even more emotive, leaving you on your knees, not in worship but pleading to be remembered and loved.

Luvcat feels like the cigarette at the end of a meal, and ‘Bad Books’ is the closest to a musical equivalent you can get. A final injection of jazz-camp seduction, she weaves a theme for the transgressive characters who once lurked in the shadows, now loud and proud.

Blending the over-the-top high notes with the mundanity of being the villain in someone’s story, it’s the final lipstick kiss left behind. And it’s one that no one can wipe off. And with unforgettable lines like “I’m just a Victorian lost in the Playboy mansion”, it’s left with a sarcastic smile.

‘Vicious Delicious’ is unlike anything before it. It’s Frankenstein’s monster's ideal bride, a combination of the dark underbelly of the gothic and raw humanity. It will stalk you, haunt you, and make the hairs on your neck stand up in bliss. Luvcat has created a world laden with pearls, subversion, and sickly sweetness—just remember not to drink the tea.


Megan-Louise Burnham

@mgn.lb

Image: Barnaby Fairley






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