On previous EPs, Twin Sister have experimented and searched for their sound. On their debut album, In Heaven, the band has found it. Twin Sister are disco-y in a post-modern sort of way; they’re too cool to push you to the dance floor but chill enough to make you bob your head.

Songs are layered with drum cracks, brimming pianos, and Andrea Estella’s youthful voice. Thechildhood innocence is only strengthened by the obvious yet poignant, lyrics like “Goodbyes are loneliest when you know we’ll never meet” or “My weekends are so loveless and so dull.”

Most of the album flows with a funky vibe, notably tracks ‘Stop’ and ‘Bad Street,’ while others like ‘Luna’s Theme’ or ‘Kimmi in a Rice Field’ come off as synthesized lullabies. It’s all subtle enough to be background music, yet it doesn’t belong behind a conversation. In Heaven is the kind of album that deserves lying on the floor with headphones, pretending you’re travelling through space. Otherwise, you might miss something rather nice.