|

Death Cab for
Cutie
Plans
Though
it's their fifth album, Death Cab for Cutie try to avoid falling into the
sophomore slump with Plans. After the commercial success of 2003’s
Transatlanticism and critical acclaim from The OC’s Seth Cohen,
DCFC decided to leave Barsuk Records and sign with the big boys
(Atlantic).
Moving to
a major label has its pressures. The record company shells out a lot of
money in recording and promotion costs and expects a significant return on
their investment. It’s nothing, though, compared to the pressure of
legions of indie fans just waiting for you to release a bad record so they
can start talking about how they liked you before you sold out.
Indie
naysayers will have to keep waiting. Plans is as good as anything
from the Death Cab catalog. The band follows same pattern of drawn-out
dreamy melodies they began with Something About Airplanes and
really started perfecting on Transatlanticism.
The album
opens with some if its strongest tracks, “Marching Bands of Manhattan,”
“Soul Meets Body,” and the nostalgic “Summer Skin.” Maybe it’s lead
singer Ben Gibbards’ recent work with techno artists, or just guitarist
Chris Walla’s production skills, but the second half of “Different Names
for the Same Thing” sounds like it could just as easily be a Postal
Service track. (If we’re lucky, maybe we’ll get a Postal Service remix.)
The only
slip ups on the album are the out-of-place-sounding “Crooked Teeth” and
the album closer “Stable Song,” which was meant as a cool-down, but is
more like a sleeping pill. Overall, Plans feels cohesive and
familiar, without sounding recycled.
I’m happy
because with this record because I know Seth Cohen will be happy with it.
|