Full Closure and No Details is the first solo full-length by Melbourne, Australia's Gabriella Cohen, who previously performed in a shambolic garage pop duo called the Furrs.
Her solo material isn't quite as loud or raucous, but it's still dreamy and soaked in fuzz.
She sings in a hazy, casual drawl similar to Kurt Vile or Mac DeMarco, but there's a bit more of a rasp to her voice.
Her lyrics reflect on busted relationships and seem to balance feelings of heartache and uneasiness with a carefree, "que sera sera" outlook.
Musically, the songs are all over the map.
"Beaches" appropriately has a lazy summer sway to it, while "Sever the Walls" sounds like a druggy, distorted mutation of '50s rock & roll.
"Yesterday" is doused in extremely trippy vocal effects, which are somehow even more shoegazey than the guitars.
After the haunting late-night waltz of "Piano Song," "Feelin' Fine" blends more '50s pop with cold, robotic processed vocals.
"Downtown" is Cohen at her most dejected, pleading to her summer love over a slow doo wop/blues-influenced rhythm.
Following the drifting guitar instrumental "Dream Song" is a slow, drunk singalong called "This Could Be Love," which ends with a chorus of cheering and animal calls.
Final song "Alien Anthem" is angular, sludgy, and playful, with a sugary chorus and a fake ending.
Full Closure and No Details is messy and not entirely focused, but it possesses charm and character, and points to greater things ahead from Cohen.