Cymbals Eat Guitars are excited to announce their forthcoming album
LOSE which will be available August 26th on Barsuk Records. In celebration, the band premiered the song “Jackson” today via
Pitchfork.
Cymbals Eat Guitars –
LOSE
Tracklisting
1. Jackson
2. Warning
3. XR
4. Place Names
5. Child Bride
6. Laramie
7. Chambers
8. Lifenet
9. 2 Hip Soul
Upcoming Tour Dates
8/20 New Haven, CT - Bar Night Club
8/21 Kingston, NY - BSP Kingston
8/22 Rockville Centre, NY - Vibe Lounge
8/24 Asbury Park, NJ - Asbury Lanes
8/26 Brooklyn, NY - Baby’s All Right
“Wanna
wake up wanting to listen to records / But those old feelings elude me
/ I raise a toast to the rock n' roll ghost,” sings Cymbals Eat Guitars
frontman Joseph D’Agostino
on the hyper-adrenalized “XR,” which sounds like a Tonight’s the Night
outtake recorded at triple speed, with its braying harmonica and
spitfire vocal delivery. It’s the track that perhaps best captures the
spirit of the band’s third LP,
LOSE, one of coping with abject loss and grief by rediscovering
what you’ve always loved, as difficult as it may be—the redemptive power
of music. For D’Agostino, this entailed coming to terms with his best
friend and musical collaborator Benjamin High,
who passed away suddenly seven years ago, just as Cymbals Eat Guitars
began recording in earnest.
“LOSE
is a very apropos title because it refers not only to losing Ben, but
also it's about a sort of nostalgia, a longing for a time when music
meant everything to
you and your friends, and it seemed like one great rock record could
change everyone's life the way it changed yours,” says D’Agostino. “It's
about being in mourning for your long-held belief that music could
literally change the world. That's the contradiction
at the heart of LOSE... You're disillusioned, but somehow you
can do nothing else but rail against that feeling mightily and try, once
again, to make a record that makes you and everyone else ‘wake up
wanting to listen to records’.”
And
indeed, the band, rounded out by bassist Matthew Whipple, keyboardist
Brian Hamilton, and drummer Andrew Dole, alongside producer John
Agnello, do little wallowing. This
is a raucous affair, an Irish Wake, ultimately rooted in nothing less
than a celebration of just being alive.
“Jackson”
kicks off the album in prototypical Cymbals fashion—all allusions to
suburban ennui, drugs, and geography, as D’Agostino reminisces, “We're
riding through Jackson
Pines / Towards Six Flags to wait in lines,” with an agoraphobic
romantic companion whom he directly addresses, “You're taking two
Klonopin / So you can quit flipping / And face our friends.” Yet, this
is a leaner, more sinister Cymbals. The vocals are crisper,
the drums more dynamic, the bass more melodic, all buttressed by a
sensational see-saw guitar figure that blossoms into a lacerating yet
anthemic rocker.
“I think this one is obviously more accessible than
Why There Are Mountains or Lenses Alien,” says D’Agostino,
referring to the band’s first two LPs, their debut having been awarded
Pitchfork’s coveted Best New Music. “The first two had a lot more stop
and start,” he continues. “This one has a
ton of momentum. It's got fluidity and grace. I think I gave the lyrics
more room to breathe, so you can kind of follow what's going on.”
The
record also features some radical stylistic departures for the band.
“We just got tired of playing mathy, ponderous songs every night,”
laughs D’Agostino. This sea change
is exemplified by the tranquil, gorgeous Velvets-esque ballad “Child
Bride,” and the soulful slow-burn of “Laramie,” that finds D’Agostino
crooning in a near Prince-esque falsetto, “I'll do the Kev and you can
do the Charles,” slyly referencing band favorite
The Wrens, before admitting with contrition, “We were both in need of
rescue / So who saved whom?”
And that’s what’s perhaps most impressive about
LOSE—the manner in which D’Agostino comes clean with his
emotions, tackling seemingly ineffable mourning without equivocation.
“There are no $5 words that you'll have to pull up dictionary.com
for... some of the lyrics are directly confessional. Very
open, no obfuscation,” he explains. “I lost my dear friend a while ago
and I've sort of been addressing it in song for most of my career,
though you probably couldn't really tell until now. It’s just a direct
expression of grief. I figured if I confronted
it head-on on record it'd make for some interesting music.”
But this is more than interesting—LOSE is a flat-out superb record, the best the band have ever made—a headlong rush of regret sublimated into a grand catharsis.
“These
songs are a joy to play, and hopefully they will be a joy to listen
to,” says D’Agostino. “I know I still get chills from every song on this
record, so that has to
mean something. You have to trust that feeling.”
barsuk.com