What Ambiguous Desire ultimately lands on is a version of Arlo Parks that feels more present. Not necessarily louder or more dramatic, but more willing to take up space. It’s a record about stepping into new environments and letting that change you, even subtly It might not have the same quiet gravity as her debut, but it doesn’t need to. This is a different kind of statement, one that trades stillness for motion and introspection for experience. And in that shift, Parks does