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Barnes and Noble

The Big Mess

Current price: $13.99
The Big Mess
The Big Mess

Barnes and Noble

The Big Mess

Current price: $13.99

Size: CD

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Following an extended hiatus,
Tanlines
return with their introspective yet still anthemic third album, 2023's
The Big Mess
. The record, which arrives eight years after 2015's
Highlights
, reunites the duo of singer, songwriter, and instrumentalist
Eric Emm
and percussionist and instrumentalist
Jesse Cohen
. Having initially established themselves in Brooklyn as purveyors of arty, indie electronic pop in the vein of
Vampire Weekend
and
Ra Ra Riot
,
spent much of the time after
away from each other, with
Emm
moving his family to Connecticut and
Cohen
working a marketing job in New York. They stayed in touch, but the COVID-19 pandemic only further delayed any recording projects. By the time they reconnected in 2022,
had amassed most of the songs that eventually made it onto
. Co-produced with
Patrick Ford
and mixed by
Peter Katis
, the album feels much more ruminative than the pair's previous work. It's an album that's infused with the kind of epic yearning for the past and simpler times that can come with entering one's forties during the band's time apart. They capture this vibe on the title track, a slowly driving rock anthem in which
opines, "It's been a long time since the campfire days, I have a hard time imagining/It's been forever since we had the chance to reminisce." The song feels like the tense lead-up to an accident, or an expected death scene in a movie, and perfectly sets the tone for what follows. Without ever romanticizing the past,
dig into the difficulty and joy of everyday life and how just getting by is sometimes the best you can do. There's also a moody paranoia running through the album that feels particularly post-pandemic, as if
is struggling with how to make life work. It's a sentiment he underlines on "New Reality" singing, "I'm just trying to be me, in this new reality." With
's voice having marinated into a deep baritone croon and with the duo leaning into a more organic, guitar-based sound, they sound less upbeat and more akin to the laconic post-punk of
Nick Cave
or
the National
. Still, there are kinetic moments here, as on "Clouds" and "Unreal," where bass grooves and airy synth and guitar textures evince a more muted, '80s new wave club atmosphere. With
capture the memory of dancing and the way reminiscing about the past can often well up feelings deep in your bones. ~ Matt Collar

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