After
 a discovery hiatus and with a new year ushered in, I felt it was time 
to return to the Cocteau Twins. This next destination being the one 
other record of theirs I knew alongside Treasure. Heaven Or Las Vegas is
 the trio's commercial peak and a record of notoriety among "albums to 
hear before you die" lists and whatnot. Rearranging the various aspects 
of their sound, the group hit a stride and roll with it through ten 
fantastic songs that revel in the Dream Pop realm they helped to 
pioneer.
Opening
 with Cherry-Coloured Funk, the temperament and pace is swiftly set as 
each song moves with this steady shuffling drive, as lavish, pedal 
effect drenched guitars drone in a wash of color and delays. Its the 
defining aesthetic of each track which hinges on simple, straightforward
 song structures. Each one plays out presenting its main idea and 
upfront with a few variations woven in. With Guthrie on a stride its a 
fine curation of ideas, resonating well with his fellow musicians who 
put icing on top.
Fraser
 pivots from her wordless performance style to sung lyrics which arrive 
with a magical cadence and distorting accent to throw one of the scent 
on occasions. The way she lays emphasis and elongates notes is charming 
yet often out of step with expectations, giving her words a cryptic 
dimension. Behind them, on every song, Simon Raymonde pumps away simple 
yet warm and cushioning bass lines, with an occasional tough of groove 
but mostly very simplistic and straightforward playing.
Brief
 moments of electronic synths can be heard too, often woven into the 
drum machine arrangements. They can sound bare and stiff on some tracks,
 bearing its mechanical nature with claps and snaps. Counter too that, 
it sounds completely organic on a handful of songs too. All in all its a
 beautiful aesthetic arrangement of Ethereal colors dazzling in the wash
 of dreamy guitars and singing that finds its charm swiftly and keeps 
you with them for the duration of the record without a blemish, bar a 
couple of drearier songs, however they bring their own rainy day magic 
too.
Rating: 8/10