Is it possible to review a movie soundtrack without watching the movie? I honestly had forgotten that Charli xcx made an album for Emerald Fennelβs βWuthering Heightsβ adaptation until way back in November of last year, when I got a notification for her first single, βHouse,β featuring John Cale of the Velvet Underground.
I didnβt even believe it was an actual Charli song until my friend had to remind me of the βWuthering Heightsβ news, which promptly gave me flashbacks to that infamous tweet: βwuthering heights starring margot robbie and jacob elordi featuring charli xcx on the soundtrack is kinda the matcha dubai chocolate labubu of film.β
Despite the βmatcha dubai chocolate labubuβ-ness of it all, βHouseβ was a beautiful and haunting single that shook me awake down to my very core with its slow buildup and rhythmic crowing of the strings, the cello chords and John Caleβs spoken word verse; the songβs deep, blaring distorted bass and drum beats, Γ la Chelsea Wolfe and Massive Attack β were unlike anything Iβd ever heard from Charli, but it was a welcome surprise.
WhileΒ I myselfΒ didnβtΒ have high hopesΒ for the upcomingΒ βWutheringΒ HeightsβΒ film,Β I knewΒ theΒ βWutheringΒ HeightsβΒ albumΒ wasΒ definitely notΒ going to disappoint. AndΒ it absolutelyΒ didnβt.Β Β
βWuthering Heightsβ is so emotional and openly vulnerable, in a much rawer way than Brat, the British singerβs sixth studio album that dominated pop culture following its summer 2024 release. It feels almost surreal hearing Charli take such a dark and brooding sound, not hiding behind her signature club beats. Instead, she swaps her acid bass and autotune for swooning orchestral chords and moody downtempo drums, creating a unique blend of Kate Havnevik and Caroline Polachek, even calling to mind folklore-era Taylor Swift in βChains of Love.β
The orchestra is a running theme throughout this album, and producer Finn Keane (also known as Easyfun) finds a way to use it uniquely in each song without making it stale. The strings in βAlways Everywhereβ are delicate and heartfelt, but in βSeeing Things,β theyβre pulsating and urgent with the syncopated piano keys. And in all these songs, Charliβs voice is so bold and raw against the warm blooming orchestra behind her.
Every song on this album feels so desperately heartfelt and tragically romantic, like kissing in the pouring rain after a devastating fight or running through the halls of an empty manor in slow motion.
However, the second half of this album takes a much darker, more bass-driven turn, with songs like βAltars,β βMy Reminder,β and βFunny Mouth.β I canβt help but be reminded of a specific era in pop music, of downtempo mid-to-late 2010s indie pop, emblematic of the 2014 Tumblr grunge era with icons like Lorde, BANKS and Lana Del Rey. While this genre might be outdated, Charli makes it anything but. Each song in this section holds a certain despair, yet a bizarre sense of freedom, like running away from home in the middle of the night. Like remembering a passionate past love thatβs since ended.
The melodrama and tragedy are turned up in these tail end songs. The song most evident of this is βAltars,β whose melancholic sounds bathe me in a monochromatic ennui, like mascara tears and fast car rides to nowhere. To drive the whole 2014 Tumblr vibe home, Charli brings out Sky Ferreira in βEyes of the World,β a devastating yet powerful anthem that brings back the crunchy bass of βHouse.β Ferreiraβs deep voice is so pronounced and rich against Charliβs voice, each singer complimenting each other perfectly.
The album ends with βFunny Mouth,β a perfect ending to this Renaissance painting of an album. Charliβs voice in this finale is so raw and emotional, calling back to Lordeβs vocal style. The albumβs signature elegant orchestra chords slide under the violent glitchy electronic hits Γ la Arca and FKA Twigs, like a hand slicing through a peaceful river stream.
As the song builds, Charliβs voice becomes transcendent and angelic. Itβs surreal compared to the autotuned voice Iβm used to hearing. And then the track β and by extension, the album β ends beautifully, languidly, like a slowly burning photograph, the album hitting its final pose, like a ballerina at the end of its performance.
All in all, Charli xcxβs βWuthering Heightsβ is elegant, brutal and dosed in melancholy and melodrama. If youβve never read a BrontΓ« novel, youβll feel like you have listening to this album. Or at least, a contemporary reimagining of BrontΓ«, complete with Arca-like glitches and bass hits. I give this album an 8/10 ββ vulnerable, heartfelt and tragic ββ βWuthering Heightsβ is a musical mosaic, using genres and sounds that weβve never seen before from Charli. If you were disappointed by the Emerald Fennell film or perhaps are just looking to see what Charli has done post-Brat, go give this work a listen. You wonβt regret it.