Turning inward on their fifth full-length, Los Angeles four-piece
Silversun Pickups shifts away from the pulsing synths and thrills of their previous effort, amplifying the drama and tension with the moody
Widow's Weeds. While not as immediate as their prior few albums, the introspective set maintains the band's focus on melodic hooks and swelling, orchestral layers, which serve to buffer their ever-potent brand of alternative rock. Joined by producer
Butch Vig (
Nirvana,
the Smashing Pumpkins,
Garbage), the group -- vocalist/guitarist
Brian Aubert, bassist
Nikki Monninger, drummer
Christopher Guanlao, and keyboardist
Joe Lester -- delivers a tight attack for these distressed and mournful songs, supercharging buzzy riffs and pounding percussion to drive
Aubert's pained lyrics deep into the core. Thematically centered on his journey to sobriety,
Widow's Weeds -- named after the black clothes worn by women in mourning -- is a heavy listen and often dwells in dark places. However, the main takeaway is change, healing, and the future. So while fear, self-doubt, and desperation creep menacingly throughout,
Aubert (backed, as always, by
Monninger's heavenly harmonies) pulls himself from the mire, declaring "we've finally made it out alive" and "I'll keep on fighting/As long as you keep trying." The struggle is present on the urgent "Neon Wounds" and the intense rager "Songbirds," while hope is offered with the grand, poetic title track. Album standout "It Doesn't Matter Why" is a driving, anxiety-packed highlight, riding an
Arcade Fire-esque urgency into the ranks as one of best songs in their catalog. Elsewhere, the potent string duo of
Paul Cartwright and
Matt Booker adds appropriate heft to a quartet of the album's most sweeping tracks, such as "Straw Man," which swells to life with elegant beauty before the veneer crashes away with a full-band assault reminiscent of the most hardened
Garbage songs. On "Don't Know Yet,"
Aubert sings, "I need a fresh start now/Reboot the machine." With
Widow's Weeds, the band hasn't necessarily reinvented their wheel, but there's a deep sense of change and growth, both in personal perspective and potential direction. While it takes time for the album to really sink in, it ends up being one of
Silversun Pickups' most emotionally satisfying and cathartic listens. ~ Neil Z. Yeung