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Barnes and Noble

The Main Thing

Current price: $15.99
The Main Thing
The Main Thing

Barnes and Noble

The Main Thing

Current price: $15.99

Size: CD

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With their 2017 album , New Jersey indie drifters began a very slow evolutionary process, changing up their time-honored formula of laid-back, jangly pop by gently introducing new sounds and ideas. A change in their long-running membership brought in new guitarist , who carried over some of the world music-influenced sensibilities that marked his excellent solo work and his new gig. Fifth album continues the band's one-step-at-a-time stylistic development while underpinning their ever sunny tunes with unlikely themes of anxiety for future generations and apocalyptic dread. You'd never know this from lead single "Paper Cup," one of the more on-brand songs the band has turned in on recent albums. With vocal accompaniment from 's , bandleader ambles through a melody as lazy as an afternoon nap with softly disaffected lyrics that depict a protagonist stuck in a rut but ultimately not too worried about it. The production is sharp and clean, full of perfectly placed hooks like the pristine vocal harmonies that glide through the chorus or an imaginative but not overplayed guitar solo from . It's an easy pick for a single and one of the most infectious moments on the album. There are a few other perky moments here and there (the bouncy title track returns the band to its signature jangle and "Silent World" brings together an old-school drum machine, live strings, and slippery slide guitar leads in an upbeat arrangement) but for the most part, tumbles by with a sleepy sway. Slower tunes like "Gone" and the bucolic "Falling Down" replace the lo-fi haze of the band's early days with a more nuanced type of psychedelic indie songwriting. Still falling into the lineage of meat-and-potatoes heroes of hushed indie rock like or , the more sophisticated arrangements recall the careful orchestration of , and 's woozy guitar playing is more than . Particularly toward the end of "Also a But," the band breaks their warm, tuneful sound down with some ungrounded jamming that sounds like an excerpt from a particularly spacy set circa 1974. Beneath the affable music, hides lyrics full of worry for the world his children will inherit, offsetting future dread with uneasy nostalgia. "Shallow Sun" sees him looking back on his own youth, wondering what's to come for the next generation. On other songs, the mood is less reflective and more alarmed, referencing toxicity, mushroom clouds, and the illusion of control. Dark undercurrents struggle with sweetly delivered tunes throughout , resulting in one of the most complex moods has cultivated. Now over a decade into their tenure as a band, they've moved from songs about suburban malaise and keg parties to pondering existence and the cycle of life. While this could be an over-serious buzzkill, grow up gracefully on while keeping a tight hold on the low-key charm and talent that made them stand out. ~ Fred Thomas

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