MV Wells Unveils Lush Orchestral Pop Debut Le Dauphin

A debut shaped by melody, craft, and beautifully cracked pop ambition.

By
Anders — Editorial Lead
Anders is the creative force and technical architect behind Divine Magazine’s editorial identity. Blending Scandinavian minimalism with a sharp instinct for digital storytelling, he shapes the...

Chicago’s MV Wells steps into his own spotlight with Le Dauphin, his debut solo album arriving May 29. It’s a sharp, melody‑forward blend of indie rock, orchestral pop, and classic songwriter craftsmanship — a record that nods to Harry Nilsson and Burt Bacharach as much as it embraces the left‑field pop instincts of Electric Light Orchestra and early solo John Lennon. After a decade moving through Chicago’s indie ecosystem — from the wiry hooks of NE‑HI to the synth‑leaning textures of Spun Out — Wells pivots toward something more intentional here. The edges remain, but the focus tightens. This is a songwriter’s record: melodic, structured, and unafraid of its own eccentricities. Even the visual world leans into that spirit, with album art by Paul Whitehead, famed for his early work with Genesis.

Recorded in Chicago at Palisade and The Mango Pit with longtime collaborator and cousin Joshua Wells (Black Mountain, Destroyer), Le Dauphin expands Wells’ sonic palette further than anything he’s released before. Strings, horns, synth washes, and layered vocal arrangements weave in and out, giving the album a sense of scale without sacrificing intimacy. You can hear the lineage — Bacharach’s elegant form, Nilsson’s off‑center charm, the Beach Boys’ harmonic richness — but it never slips into imitation. There’s too much personality, too much friction in the writing.

Wells has always had a knack for hooks, but here they feel lived‑in. The melodies linger, less like quick hits and more like lines that quietly take root. His vocal delivery carries a dry, knowing tone — equal parts charm and side‑eye — pulling from the tradition of pub‑rock storytellers like Nick Lowe and Wreckless Eric while staying grounded in the Midwest scenes that shaped him. That balance gives Le Dauphin its character: polished on the surface, slightly cracked underneath. The record shifts fluidly between bright, immediate moments built on piano, brass, and rhythmic swing, and more cosmic, unsettled passages that nod toward early prog and art‑pop detours. None of it feels accidental. It’s all part of the same conversation — a songwriter testing how far a pop song can stretch before it snaps.

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Behind the scenes, the album benefits from a tight, intuitive cast. Joshua Wells shapes much of the record’s sonic architecture — drums, percussion, and string arrangements that give several tracks their lift. Contributions from Olivia Love (violin), Benjamin Kalb (cello), and Joe Lill (trumpet, flugelhorn) add color without overwhelming the mix. Additional sound design threads subtle movement through the quieter corners. Everything serves the song. The visual identity follows suit, with photography by Alexa Viscius and additional imagery from Katherine Levi.

Wells’ path to Le Dauphin runs through years of touring — Chicago clubs, Midwestern taverns, festival stages — building a reputation as a songwriter who could land a hook without overthinking it. This album doesn’t abandon that instinct; it refines it. There’s more space, more intention, and a clear sense of an artist stepping into his own lane rather than orbiting a scene. Le Dauphin may be a debut, but it’s not the work of a beginner. It’s the sound of someone who’s spent years figuring out what matters, what doesn’t, and what’s worth carrying forward. The result is a record that feels classic and quietly off‑kilter — grounded in pop tradition but never content to sit still. It doesn’t shout. It lingers.

MV Wells Online

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MV Wells On Tour

May 30 – Chicago, IL – Color Club (w/ Molly Carberry, BES DJs)
June 2 – Milwaukee, WI – Cactus Club
June 3 – St. Louis, MO – The Sinkhole (w/ Makes A Difference)
June 5 – Kalamazoo, MI – Glow Hall (w/ Hot Girls, Queenie T & The Frogs & Toads)
June 6 – Detroit, MI – Outer Limits Lounge

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Anders is the creative force and technical architect behind Divine Magazine’s editorial identity. Blending Scandinavian minimalism with a sharp instinct for digital storytelling, he shapes the magazine’s voice, visual rhythm, and structural clarity. His work moves between worlds — part editor, part engineer — ensuring every article is not only beautifully crafted but technically flawless beneath the surface.From SEO frameworks to asset design, from WordPress architecture to the magazine’s cinematic featured imagery, Anders builds the systems that let stories breathe. He curates Divine’s tone with intention: clean lines, honest language, and a commitment to elevating everyday subjects into something quietly extraordinary.Whether refining editorial workflows or sculpting the magazine’s long‑term creative direction, Anders brings a steady hand and an eye for detail — the kind that turns a publication into a signature.
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