Reviews > Arcade Fire

Arcade Fire Incinerate The Suburbs

By Johnny Firecloud
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
 

Arcade Fire have returned with an intense, sprawling, sixteen-track monster of a third album that digs through the dregs of lost identity and heartache, staring mortality in the face while casting a musical Molotov cocktail into the scene that both birthed them and anchored them.

It was two years ago that frontman Win Butler began building on the inspiration he found after receiving a letter from an old hometown friend from just outside Houston, Texas. “He sent us a picture of him with his daughter on his shoulders at the mall around the corner from where we lived,” says Butler. “And the combination of seeing this familiar place and seeing my friend with his child brought back a lot of feeling from that time. I found myself trying to remember the town that we grew up in and trying to retrace as much as I could remember.”

The age-worn memories cast a thematic air over The Suburbs, lending a reflective intimacy to even the most epically ambitious tracks. Nostalgia is a major player on the album, as are the hard realities of the inevitable settling sensation that comes with examining an existence in suburbia – the mundanity, the burdens of responsibility, the struggles, the joy, the dying. It’s all here and all very present, from the gorgeous opening title track onward.

If the Decemberists proved themselves champions of the fantasy narrative with last year’s astonishing Hazards Of Love, then Arcade Fire are their realist counterparts, navigating the avenues of true life with a stirring portrait of the ubiquitous track-housing reality of America. Through the music, the characterized cul-de-sacs on which these folks reside are amplified as metaphors for their spiritual and intellectual experiences and adapted capacities.

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Businessmen, they drink my blood / Like the kids in art school said they would,” Butler muses at the onset of dark-pop dancer Ready To Start, narrating an indie act’s rise and ultimate coming to grips with the compromise and oncoming train of ascending popularity. The space is beautiful, like both The Cure and The Smiths decided to leave their whiny bullshit at the door for the sake of grabbing hold of a universal feeling with their combined superpowers.

And what is that feeling? There’s a common thread throughout the album, despite multiple singers embodying different characters and perspectives, of realizing the futility of the fight, but not in admission of defeat. It’s a philosophically beautiful album, embracing the weight of sorrow and loose-fitting hope together as one, a part of the inevitable universality of our experience. But there’s a fire burning beneath, a victory in conveyance, a renewal through reflection that’s an important player in the spirit of the entire record.

Producer Markus Dravs captures a lush vibrance in the tones, perfectly conveying a clean delivery and well-rounded sound heavy on nuanced atmospherics – such as on the lush string opening to Modern Man. The song is a gentle folk-pop journey of upswung melancholy with a simple, devastating and highly singable melody imitated by the guitar line between verses.

The scenester crucifixion Rococo follows, chopping acoustics and Disney-demon strings lampooning the modern kids “using great big words that they don’t understand” with a habit of building things up just to burn them down again. A weird cuckoo-call chorus section frames the title lyric, crafted elegantly enough to give a buoyant quirk to the track rather than anchor it.

Empty Room sounds anything but empty, with frantic strings giving way to a galloping beat and gliding guitar line as Butler harmonizes the chirpy verse with his wife, Régine Chassagne. The shades-of-Street Fightin’ Man track City With No Children follows, somehow deftly connecting a sedated Beggars Banquet-era Rolling Stones with Conor Oberst in a Bright Eyes mood.

The somber sunrise of Half Light I gives way to a sequel far more promising and optimistic, building steadily to a hymnal peak that fades amidst a flurry of layered drum tracks. It’s an ample setup for the lost-connection ballad of Suburban War, remembering an old friend from whom the narrator has found himself on a different musical battlefield. When the change hits and everything is intensified in double-time, Butler’s voice trembles as he wails “All my old friends, they don’t know me now / All my old friends are staring through me now” yearning for what was with a tangible taste of futility.

Taking a page out of the Eagles Of Death Metal playbook, Month Of May is little more than a single chord eighths-strum with an anthemic, tongue-in-cheek hip-shake vocal melody about the rock audience turning into a scene where “the kids are all standing with their arms folded tight.”

The track grows more sinister and dynamic, live-fading to ethereal keys that open Wasted Hours, a jarring departure into ’60s sunshine pop. By sharp contrast, Butler’s heartsick croon in Sprawl I (Flatland) makes one never want to revisit their old hometown… ever. Color washes back in with Régine’s odd German-pop ode on Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains), a track that clearly makes the case that Arcade Fire possess the kind of creative versatility coupled with depth of structural awareness the likes of which we see only every few years, at best.

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A brief, palette-cleansing reprise of The Suburbs bookends a 16-song, richly spellbinding journey that eclipses 2004’s Funeral and its 2007 sequel Neon Bible. There’s a clarity and currency of heart at play within these tracks, a finely-tuned meeting of inspiration, vision and ability that will serve as a milestone in what’s sure to be a lengthy, illustrious career for Arcade Fire.

A new contender has arrived for the best album of 2010. Listen to the whole thing here.

 
US Release: Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Label: Merge Records
  1. 01. The Suburbs
  2. 02. Ready To Start
  3. 03. Modern Man
  4. 04. Rococo
  5. 05. Empty Room
  6. 06. City With No Children
  7. 07. Half Light I
  8. 08. Half Light II (No Celebration)
  9. 09. Suburban War
  10. 10. Month Of May
  11. 11. Wasted Hours
  12. 12. Deep Blue
  13. 13. We Used To Wait
  14. 14. Sprawl I (Flatland)
  15. 15. Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)
  16. 16. The Suburbs (Continued)
Antiquiet Rating
 
 
 
 

25 Comments

  • rimesparse says:

    Jeez, hold off on the The Cure and Smiths bashing. Those bands’
    “whiny bullshit” grabs hold of many a universal feeling. For me personally, much more so than the high school poetry of Arcade Fire ever has. But regardless of differing tastes, not sure why those two bands had to get dissed. I suspect Win and the rest of the band probably love both of them.

  • stu says:

    I’ve been dismissing this band for quite a while due to some really weak songs on Funeral and general hipster creaming. This does sound like it could be something really great though, suppose I’ll try it out.

  • Aaron says:

    and some beautiful album artwork to top it all off. these guys got it.

  • I won’t question your 5-star decision. This does sound pretty good.

  • Mike says:

    It seems like you have to be a pretty devout Arcade Fire fan to like this album. I couldn’t get through it after 6 or 7 tracks. Is there something I should listen to before this album that would help me understand why it’s so great?

    • Hell no you don’t. I had no interest in Arcade Fire until I clicked play on this album. The previous two didn’t hold my interest at all.

      • Gears says:

        You should start at “Funeral.” One of the best albums of the ’00s. Try the following tracks: “Rebellion (Lies)”, “Crown of Love,” “Wake Up,” Power’s Out”.

  • Rory says:

    Definitely worthy of 5 stars.

    It is right up there with Gorillaz – Plastic Beach for me this year.

    To Mike: simply listen to both of their previous LP’s. To me this album is a hybrid of undeniable indie/pop awareness of Funeral and the somber/ominous lyrical subtext of Neon Bible.

    This album sounds more polished than Neon Bible because it wasn’t recorded in a gloomy Quebec church…but that doesn’t take anything away from it. I’m very excited about the direction this band has taken with The Suburbs.

    Go see them live… if you are so fortunate.

    • MichaelPG says:

      You reminded me that some
      INCREDIBLY KICK-ASS ALBUMS
      were released during this year.

      Em’s “Recovery,” “Plastic Beach,” and now this gem.

      Firecloud, I agree that aside from a few songs the previous Arcade Fire albums bored me for the most part.

      Goddamn, I think there were only three great albums during the whole of the last decade, and we already have three this year. Haha.

  • Rory says:

    Another quick note:

    Could be coincidental…but Month of May sounds a lot like Queens of the Stone Age – Medication and Sprawl II’s vocal melodies are quite similar to Blondie’s – Heart of Glass.

  • stu says:

    Waiting to get the album to give it a good listen, but could any literary minded folks chip in on whether the two sprawls have anything to do with the book titles in their subtitles? Any band that name checks Flatland is worth a listen as far as I’m concerned. Also, you guys are forgetting the new Rotary Downs for album of the year consideration, especially if you liked this.

  • opiAted says:

    Great stuff. I wish I had the time to listen to it over and over and over again the way I did with Sgt. Pepper’s on a wonderful June day in 1967.

    Tonight the curtains are swirling and shuddering as the mid-night winds penetrate mosquito screens and cool the morning’s humidity to come, as I am soon to sleep.

    Had this album been released two months prior this grand romp might have been a wonderful soundtrack for this summer for many. I suppose now it will be ringing down dusty dorm hallways, as they from the burbs move into their next location.

  • James Whyte says:

    is the guy above trollin or for real?

  • Dan says:

    I still can’t decided if I think this is a better album than Funeral. It’s at least close The album is getting so popular. I’ve even heard from some people who didn’t like them that they like this. I’ve listened to it about ten times now and it is only getting better.

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  • Henry Allen says:

    Haven’t stopped listening to this album since I bought it 2 weeks ago. And to be honest with you all, it gets better & better with every listening. Definately more rounded & better than Funeral (one of my favourite b4 The Suburbs come out). It sits on level term with Ok Computer (could even be better….imho)
    P.S
    I stopped 3 songs into the Smith greatest hit collection….I only really enjoyed The Panic (the first song in the collection lol)…..What so great about The Smiths?? Give me U2 anytime^^

  • Rebecca says:

    I just found this awesome video of Arcade Fire doing a “Take Away Show,” if you’re a fan of Neon Bible I suggest you check it out!

    http://www.ourstage.com/blog/2010/8/12/viewer-discretion-advised-la-blogotheque-the-take-away-shows

  • Elijah's Rain says:

    I saw them at MSG last month and they were sick. This album has stuck to me this year more than any ablum has in a long time.

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