Lucrecia Dalt's A Danger To Ourselves marks a sharp shift from the conceptual distance of her earlier work, offering a rawer follow-on experience: her fifth studio album and first since iAy! (2022), it trades the sci-fi bolero stylings in for the pulsing candour of Alex Lazaro's live drum loops, against which Dalt's voice takes the foreground, less as ornament, more as anchor, floating in the interlingual space of English and Spanish, surrounded by bariolaged instrumentation and e-processing in post. Notably co-produced with David Sylvian and joined by Juana Molina, Cyrus Campbell and Eliana Joy, the album deepens her interest in form as feeling. Recorded after fragments gathered while touring and falling in love, A Danger To Ourselves is a case of camera-lucid self-exposure in slow moti