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Lost the Dream [LP]
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Lost the Dream [LP]
Current price: $12.79
Barnes and Noble
Lost the Dream [LP]
Current price: $12.79
Size: CD
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When Philadelphia-based purveyors of stripped-down, haunted rock perfection
the War on Drugs
came on the scene with their 2008 debut,
Wagonwheel Blues
, their sound perked up the ears of a new generation of soul searchers looking for a soundtrack. Summoning up the patron saints of FM radio rock, the band was constantly framed as an update to the wild-eyed sermons of
Dylan
and
Springsteen
or the summer-night abandon that
Tom Petty
perfected, all filtered through walls of decidedly indie guitar noise. Founding member
Kurt Vile
left the band to pursue his blooming solo path by the time of 2011's
Slave Ambient
, leaving key songwriter
Adam Granduciel
running the show completely for that album's well-received set of songs and heightened production. Work on follow-up third album
Lost in the Dream
began while the band was on tour in 2012, with the full process of writing, demoing, and recording stretching out over a 15-month period and employing five different studios in as many states. Instead of resulting in a piecemeal pastiche of discordant ideas,
actually represents the most fully realized statement from the group thus far, with all ten songs gelling together with a sense of purpose and understated brilliance the band came close to before, but delivers in full here. Starting with the epic two-chord gallop of "Under the Pressure,"
Granduciel
offers up song after song of incredibly restrained yet entirely engaged rock. The classic rock reference points led to a "blue-collar rock" labeling of the band's sound, and while there are undeniable callbacks to
Petty
,
, and
here, as there were on earlier albums,
have come into their own with their sound. What comes on as simplistic or even predictable rock instrumentation always unfolds to reveal buried synth sounds, horn blurts, long ambient passages, and -- more impressively -- an unexpected emotional depth propping up the bare-bones songs. While "Burning" channels the same yelping frustration and working-class trudge of
's "Dancing in the Dark," songs like "Red Eyes" and the gorgeous "An Ocean in Between the Waves" meld
Jackson Browne
's inward-looking sensitivity and
Fleetwood Mac
-like mysteriousness with an edgy depravity belonging to
alone. The songs are expansive, regardless of their tone, with the ten tunes sprawling out into almost an hourlong running time, leaving no stone unturned in their nuanced production and deceptively simple presentation. In this way,
is
'
Daydream Nation
or
Disintegration
; lengthy distillations of similar themes result in wildly different threads of song, all connecting again in the end. It's a near flawless collection of dreamy vibes, shifting moods, and movement, and stands easily as
's finest hour so far. ~ Fred Thomas
the War on Drugs
came on the scene with their 2008 debut,
Wagonwheel Blues
, their sound perked up the ears of a new generation of soul searchers looking for a soundtrack. Summoning up the patron saints of FM radio rock, the band was constantly framed as an update to the wild-eyed sermons of
Dylan
and
Springsteen
or the summer-night abandon that
Tom Petty
perfected, all filtered through walls of decidedly indie guitar noise. Founding member
Kurt Vile
left the band to pursue his blooming solo path by the time of 2011's
Slave Ambient
, leaving key songwriter
Adam Granduciel
running the show completely for that album's well-received set of songs and heightened production. Work on follow-up third album
Lost in the Dream
began while the band was on tour in 2012, with the full process of writing, demoing, and recording stretching out over a 15-month period and employing five different studios in as many states. Instead of resulting in a piecemeal pastiche of discordant ideas,
actually represents the most fully realized statement from the group thus far, with all ten songs gelling together with a sense of purpose and understated brilliance the band came close to before, but delivers in full here. Starting with the epic two-chord gallop of "Under the Pressure,"
Granduciel
offers up song after song of incredibly restrained yet entirely engaged rock. The classic rock reference points led to a "blue-collar rock" labeling of the band's sound, and while there are undeniable callbacks to
Petty
,
, and
here, as there were on earlier albums,
have come into their own with their sound. What comes on as simplistic or even predictable rock instrumentation always unfolds to reveal buried synth sounds, horn blurts, long ambient passages, and -- more impressively -- an unexpected emotional depth propping up the bare-bones songs. While "Burning" channels the same yelping frustration and working-class trudge of
's "Dancing in the Dark," songs like "Red Eyes" and the gorgeous "An Ocean in Between the Waves" meld
Jackson Browne
's inward-looking sensitivity and
Fleetwood Mac
-like mysteriousness with an edgy depravity belonging to
alone. The songs are expansive, regardless of their tone, with the ten tunes sprawling out into almost an hourlong running time, leaving no stone unturned in their nuanced production and deceptively simple presentation. In this way,
is
'
Daydream Nation
or
Disintegration
; lengthy distillations of similar themes result in wildly different threads of song, all connecting again in the end. It's a near flawless collection of dreamy vibes, shifting moods, and movement, and stands easily as
's finest hour so far. ~ Fred Thomas