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Barnes and Noble

Crystal Castles (III) [LP]

Current price: $29.99
Crystal Castles (III) [LP]
Crystal Castles (III) [LP]

Barnes and Noble

Crystal Castles (III) [LP]

Current price: $29.99

Size: OS

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(III)
's haunting cover photo of a Muslim woman protecting her son might seem initially like it was chosen just to get attention, but it's actually the perfect representation of the album's complex mix of bleakness and comfort. This is
Crystal Castles
' most serious set of songs yet, with a darker tone and streamlined sound that dovetails with its motifs of outsiders, injustices, and revolution.
Ethan Kath
and
Alice Glass
' second album showed the duo was expanding their 8-bit vocabulary, and that comes to fruition here, particularly on the album-opener "Plague" and "Wrath of God," where
Glass
' distant rage and
Kath
's shadowy, claustrophobic synths invert their previously fiery electro-punk into something colder and more lingering.
(II)
standouts "Baptism" and "Not in Love" provide the template for some of
's best moments: "Telepath" and "Affection," which temper their tear-stained whispers with some of the duo's most straightforward and danceable beats, could soundtrack the world's saddest rave; "Transgender" adds a dash of fury to the mix, and "Sad Eyes," the album's most immediate song, amps up the drama and heartbreak to levels guaranteed to cut a swath on the dancefloor. Melody plays a bigger role on
than it did in
' earlier music, from
' more refined and nuanced singing to the beautifully ominous feel of "Mercenary" and especially "Child I Will Hurt You," which closes the album with a sparkling sadness like a broken snow globe. And while the duo downplays the noisy chiptune freakouts that defined their first album and punctuated their second, they use their more extreme sounds with more purpose. "Insulin"'s distortion workout provides a palate cleanser from the album's more emotional tracks, while "Kerosene"'s helium-laced backing vocals add an eerie innocence that
does her best to protect from the harshness surrounding them. Artistic progress is as much about subtraction as it is about addition, and on
,
have made room to be sad, angry, pretty, and danceable at the same time. That's an unusual mix of emotions, and while it might be condescending to say that they've grown up, they've certainly outgrown many of the preconceptions about what their music can be. [
was also released on LP.] ~ Heather Phares

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