8/10
R.M. Hendrix’s latest full-length offering 'Yuks' is fractured, sardonic, and weirdly comforting in its dissonance. It arrives like an elegy whispered through a megaphone, balancing between bleak satire and glimmers of human empathy. True to its title, 'Yuks' is both a smirk and a snarl, treading a tightrope between absurdity and anguish.
Now based in Iceland, Hendrix seems to channel the island’s stark, cinematic landscapes into a record that traverses the inner fallout zones of modern life. The opening track 'A Heat Surrounds the Hive' sets the tone: glitchy electronics stutter beneath a hazy vocal delivery, evoking a digital dystopia where unease pulses in every corner. Elsewhere, 'Thing Fellow' stretches a trip-hop skeleton across swirling synths and unpredictable turns, suggesting influence from the shadowy grooves of Portishead but with Hendrix’s signature off-kilter charm.
The production, thanks in part to acclaimed Icelandic producer Valgeir Sigurðsson, gives 'Yuks' its ghostly glow; drenched in reverb, but precise in its chaotic layering. It’s not just noise for noise’s sake; even at its most abstract, there’s a thread pulling you forward. Each track feels like it’s crawling toward some long-lost clarity, only to collapse into another beautifully twisted loop.
But don’t mistake the irony for detachment. At the core of 'Yuks' lies a quiet plea; not for order, but for understanding. Beneath the smoggy textures and fractured rhythms, there’s a heartbeat. Hendrix isn’t laughing because it’s funny. He’s laughing because it hurts, and because sometimes, laughter is all we have left before we begin to rebuild.