Allie X, born Alexandra Hughes, has long been a chameleon in the alt-pop world. After the electric, synth-heavy Girl with No Face (2024), Happiness Is Going to Get You (HIGTY), this fourth studio album settles into a more spacious, haunted chamber of sound, revealing both vulnerability and a refined conceptual vision.

The album’s title itself reads like a promise and a question: will happiness really "get you"? Or is it always chasing, always just out of reach? The cover art, being Allie alone, playing a harp in a glass box on a windswept shore, feels like a visual metaphor for this tension: isolation, aspiration, and the fragile barrier between the self and the world.

Nostalgia with a Baroque Twist

One of the most striking things about HIGTY is how Allie trades her usual nocturnal, gothic-pop textures for something more delicate, reverb-laden, and piano-centred. As noted by reviewers, she leans into 1990s and early-2000s pop references, but not in a derivative way, more as if she’s gently conversing with her musical forebears.

Take 7th Floor: it opens with whistling and a pulsing baseline, creating a cheery surface. But metaphorically, that elevator imagery (rising and falling, waiting, watching) evokes liminal spaces much like a poem about stagnation or longing.

In contrast, Reunite, a lead single, layers organ, synth, and harpsichord in a way that feels at once timeless and deeply personal. The song’s bittersweet optimism, as she sings about reconciling with the past, is where Allie’s self-reflective songwriting really shines.

Between Light and Shadow

Throughout the album, Allie X weaves together innocence and introspection, nostalgia and trauma, hope and disquiet; much like a gothic bildungsroman told in twelve tracks.

In I Hope You Hear This Song, for example, she cloaks lyrical threats in the sweetness of nursery-rhyme harp and angelic vocal layers. The result is a lullaby that conceals something sharper beneath.

Uncle Lenny is another character piece: a wry, dreamlike portrait of a toxic uncle, financial betrayal, and familial dysfunction. Her vocals become a choral swirl, and she even sneaks in reversed lines, underscoring the distortion inherent in memory and abuse.

There’s also It Gets Better (It’s Worse Than Ever), a brief (45-second) piano-music-box interlude which is playful and childlike, yet disquieting, as if she’s serenading but also warning.

And then the closer, It’s Just Light, brings together optimism and gothic tension: high-register vocals, haunted-house organ, a monotone piano and a fragile hope held in a haunted frame.

Strengths and Qualms

The album’s twists and turns make it Allie X’s most exciting, thought-provoking work to date. On the other hand, her careful, studious approach sometimes feels overcalculated. Allie clearly honours her musical influences, such as Massive Attack, Portishead and early-aughts trip-hop, and there are moments when the homage feels too footnoted, as if she’s checking off a list of art-pop credentials rather than leaping beyond them.

Yet, the spy-movie strut of 7th Floor, the character-driven narrative in Uncle Lenny, and the sweeping emotional resonance in Stay Green all point to her unique skill as both songwriter and conceptual artist.

Happiness Is Going to Get You is, in many ways, a quieter album than Allie X’s previous work. But that restraint is a deliberate choice. She’s not out to dazzle with big synth drops or bombastic choruses. Instead, she offers something fragile yet intricate: emotional depth wrapped in baroque pop, with gothic touches woven into sunlit piano moments.

For fans of her past eccentricity, this record may feel more subdued. But for listeners who appreciate character-driven songwriting and pop music that feels like a secret told in whispers, HIGTY is a richly rewarding listen.

In the end, Allie X asks us not just whether happiness will arrive, but how it might find us and whether, once found, we even recognise it.

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