The album boasts several bangers – the best is obviously Runaway, fronted by Steel Panther’s brilliantly ridiculous Michael Starr (c’mon, we’d all like to be him for a week or two, wouldn’t we?). Also up there is the predictably heavy Fall Of Man, featuring Matt, and Do Or Die, a splendidly riff-heavy opener that benefits massively from the stonking pipes of classic rock dude Nathan James. A less likely highlight is Won’t You Come, anthemic hard rock candy that sees Sophie reunited with Marisa Rodriguez, with whom the guitarist briefly played in Marisa And The Moths, and it’s clear the chemistry is still there.
As bright as the musicianship shines, the writing is too predictable elsewhere. It’d be great in future to hear Sophie wrap her talents around something acoustic, or against elements of electronic rock, anything except rock-by-numbers. Imposter Syndrome is nevertheless an impactful and worth-waiting-for arrival.
Verdict: 3/5
For fans of: Van Halen, Extreme, Mötley Crüe
Imposter Syndrome is out on November 10 via Autumn Records