Lucid Express, “Instant Comfort”
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February 18, 2026
After building momentum over a few years of local shows and an international tour, Hong Kong shoegaze quintet Lucid Express returns with their second album, Instant Comfort. Blurrier and less glossy than their 2021 debut, the new record is situated at the sweet spot of screwed-down dream pop, ethereal vocals draped over lush guitars and synths, with a few tense, discordant edges.
Instant Comfort was recorded in the band’s studio, an island within an island, perched in an industrial district outside central Hong Kong, with views of both skyscrapers and the Chinese border. It’s a sanctuary from the grinding realities of the city, and their music likewise plays like a delicate and immersive retreat, a space that feels temporarily above reality. Vocalist Kim Ho’s voice is airy and magnetic at the front of the mix on Instant Comfort, her lyrics whimsical and confessional. At different points on the early-release singles “Something Blue” and “Faux Sweetness,” she conveys tense longing and tender vulnerability.
In parallel, the album’s instrumentation weaves together complex, competing guitar lines and layered synths that mostly glide by as spacious, intertwining melodies, giving the album a shimmering, introspective quality overall. Submerged low-pass filter sweeps give some sections a subtle trip-hop feel. Occasionally, the band grinds with intense, overdriven energy, as on the relatively frantic mid-album standout “Setback,” propelled by a few raw, restless guitar solos.
Lucid Express originally formed as Thud in 2014, weeks before the Umbrella Movement took off in Hong Kong. They reformed as Lucid Express in 2021 with a more organic sound, and Instant Comfort sees them push even further away from Thud’s clean synth-pop and into fuzzier territory. The album’s production—by Kurt Feldman of The Pains of Being Pure at Heart and The Depreciation Guild—deftly showcases Ho’s voice and the granular texture of each instrument. The drums get particularly good treatment, a full, well-balanced sound anchoring the swirling arrangements with clarity and heft. The songs have room to breathe and swell, and there’s plenty of space for sounds to linger. The album’s eponymous closer offers a graceful exit—ironically, a good place to start if you want to zero in on the darker, sludgier nuances. It starts slow and decays into a fog of reverb-buried guitars and backward-looped melodies, with the drums steadily becoming a louder and more hypnotic underpinning. It’s the album’s densest haze before it ends with an amplifier click—quiet punctuation to a sprawling trip.
Instant Comfort is a rich, textural experience, one presumably best experienced live and loud. Building on the momentum of their first North America tour last year, Lucid Express is gearing up to return in March for a second round, including appearances at New Colossus Festival and South by Southwest. The record is a luminous document of their swirling sound, capturing the band’s immersive energy with detail and warmth.
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