The first full-length by
the War on Drugs is at once an album of its time --
indie rock as collection and collage of classic
rock sonic signifiers that rank former tourmates
Neil Young and
Sonic Youth as equal inspirations -- and something that stretches beyond those expectations. That may sound like damning with faint praise, but given indie's crisis of confidence in itself in the 21st century, finding all sorts of "real"
rock to hold on to as a rear-guard action against
pop's all-devouring reworking of world-wide sounds, hearing a band that doesn't sound beholden to create some sort of huge statement with their album is rather refreshing.
Adam Granduciel's role as frontman is the kind of slightly strangled vocal signifier that could make one group of listeners think of
Bob Dylan or
Ian Hunter, and another of
Half Japanese, while just as similarly the full band lineup seems to want to constantly move easily back and forth between an older set of sounds and a slightly newer one, with a definite bias towards the kind of lush guitar atmospherics that found a congenial home in the U.K. in the '80s and early '90s. (Though sometimes the balance is fully skewed, as with the post-
shoegaze chime and shimmer of the instrumental
"Coast Reprise.") A sign of the kind of mix-and-match at play comes early on with
"Taking the Farm," which sounds as much like the
Cocteau Twins as it does like a
Tex-Mex romp, while
"A Needle in Your Eye #16" might be the slyest
Spacemen 3 tribute ever, taking all the elements from that band at its best (droney
gospel keyboard vamps, blunt drumming, rapture via
psychedelia) and recombining it with their own specific stamp thanks to
Granduciel's singing. In all, an unexpected delight. ~ Ned Raggett