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Skylight
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Skylight
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
Skylight
Current price: $15.99
Size: CD
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After several years of hard touring and self-released albums, New Jersey combo
made their breakthrough with 2016's
, their first release for Boston indie
. Fronted by mercurial singer/songwriter
, the group's mix of ragged, emo-tinged indie rock and introspective Americana struck a chord with fans and critics, landing them on a number of high-profile year-end lists and increasing their national visibility significantly. As most bands would do in their position, they entered the logical cycle of touring, promoting, and working on their follow-up the following summer. In keeping with their previous albums,
was self-recorded, this time at a house the band was renting in Upstate New York, and after sessions wrapped up, they'd even gotten as far as releasing its lead single, the moody, slow-building "Intrepid," in early November 2017. Here
's story diverges from the norm, starting with the sudden band-issued statement that
had been accused of "sexual coercion" and that both the release and all touring plans had been shelved out of respect for the accuser while the band internally dealt with the issue. Arriving in the midst of the #MeToo movement, the allegations were by all accounts addressed quickly and directly by all parties, with
admitting he'd had a "brief but intense" relationship with his accuser. What proved to be a somewhat complicated story was investigated and discussed in several online publications and by the time
-- which had been entirely written and recorded prior to the accusation -- had been OK'd for release,
had lost their label support and a good deal of their momentum. Tainted as it may be by the situation, the self-released set is a beautifully written and wholly engaging successor to
, building on that album's searching emotional tone with sharper songwriting and curious allusions to deep self-reflection and bettering one's path which, in hindsight, seems to address the issue that blocked its path to release. The warm and roomy production and rich harmonies imbue standouts like "Portal" and "Angelina" with a beguiling kind of wistfulness. A sweet mix of melancholic guitar rock and big-hearted folk, "Darkness" is another highlight among this achingly human collection which, for better or for worse, remains tied to a hurtful public affair that can be heard retroactively within its seams. ~ Timothy Monger