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Khruangbin – “White Gloves ii” Review: A Bittersweet Ode to Memory and Loss

By Alex HarrisNovember 10, 2025
Khruangbin – "White Gloves ii" Review: A Bittersweet Ode to Memory and Loss

Khruangbin’s “White Gloves ii”, released on November 6, 2025, captures a particular kind of ache that comes from remembering someone who’s gone with almost unbearable grace. 

The Texas trio mesmerise with a mid-tempo groove that moves through your senses like water.

The track arrives exactly ten years after their 2015 debut album The Universe Smiles Upon You. 

To celebrate the anniversary, Khruangbin revisited the record with The Universe Smiles Upon You ii, a full re-imagining and re-recording made in the same location, using the same instruments, but viewed through the lens of who they are now. 

As bassist Laura Lee Ochoa told Rolling Stone, “We’ll just do it all over again. And it will be us ten years later with the same instruments in the same location, and it’ll be different because we’re different.”

The White Gloves ii lyrics is a tribute to the queen in our lives, someone we hold truly dear in our hearts, drifting through snapshots of a person who was refined yet fierce, classy but never quiet. 

The white gloves become a perfect symbol of dignity maintained even in chaos, elegance that never slipped.

When the song reveals she “died in a fight,” there’s no dramatisation, just a calm, almost stoic acknowledgment that sometimes the world takes people who deserved better.

What makes this version brilliant is how the instrumentation mirrors those emotions. Mark Speer’s guitar work is exquisite, each phrase adding emotional depth, while Laura Lee’s hypnotic bassline winds meditatively through your mind, creating an unbroken current of calm reflection.

The repetition of “she was a queen” becomes almost ritualistic, a quiet prayer of remembrance.

 Each time Laura sings it, it carries new meaning: memory, celebration, and loss, all intertwined. The sparse production gives the song its intimacy; anything more would have been too loud for grief this quiet.

The video, filmed in a single unbroken take, feels like being let in on a secret. The scuff of a shoe, the faint clap of hands, and the hum of a room alive with memory make the experience hauntingly real.

It is a perfect, heartbreaking echo of the song itself: a beautiful moment, suspended in time, that ends before you are ready, just like the memories it aches for.

For other reflective pieces on Neon Music exploring memory and artistry, discover more reviews on neonmusic.co.uk.

“White Gloves ii” serves as a crystal-clear lens on Khruangbin’s The Universe Smiles Upon You ii, focusing their prismatic blend of Southeast Asian inspiration and psychedelic soul into a sharp, intimate point of beauty. It’s a piece of art that quietly reminds you why music matters.

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