The Killers – Pressure Machine | Album Review

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Editor’s Note: Friday 13th, August 2021, at 1:36 AM Mountain Time, I hit play on Pressure Machine, the then-just-hours-old seventh album from The Killers. I spent the next two hours listening to the record and jotting down my reactions in real-time. What follows is a (slightly) polished version of those thoughts in an exercise I’m calling a “first listen” review. 


I’m going to let you guys in on a little secret; Imploding The Mirage just barely missed out on our 2020 Album of the Year list. It was so close to making our top 15, in fact, that you can even see the album cover in the header image for that post. Mirage hit the sweet spot for me in so many ways; it dropped at the peak of an antsy and confined COVID summer, came from a group that I have loved since childhood, represented an artistic return to form, and touched on a genre that doesn’t get enough time in the spotlight. While Imploding the Mirage genuinely feels like a modern Heartland Rock classic, it was just barely edged out by other releases by the time the end of the year rolled around. 

When The Killers announced a second, more pensive accompaniment to the soaring open-road indigo of Mirage, we all knew what they were doing. Shortly after the album’s announcement, they released a collab with Bruce Springsteen, and then they unveiled the black and white cross-adorned album cover. The signs were all there, and they weren’t subtle; this is The Killers doing their Nebraska. Lead singer Brandon Flowers even went as far as to explain that, due to the Coronavirus, the release of the Mirage was “the first time in a long time that I was faced with silence, And out of that silence this record began to bloom, full of songs that would have otherwise been too quiet and drowned out by the noise of typical Killers records.” Sounds awfully familiar to me. 

It took them a while (and included a few stumbles), but The Killers have finally figured out who they are in this late stage of their career, and that is a Springsteen worship band. That’s fine. I love that. I support that. Sam’s Town is still a classic to this day, and I say lean into your influences. That said, Nebraska is probably my favorite Springsteen record (yeah, I’m one of those guys), so I went into Pressure Machine with my guard up… but I’ll be damned if they didn’t suck me in almost immediately. 

The record opens with a menacing Godspeed-esque warble over field recordings of people talking about their lives in some unnamed small town. As you listen to these disembodied voices tell you about living in the same place for decades and marrying someone straight out of high school, your mind immediately begins to flesh out some dusty corner of America. While inspired by Brandon Flowers’ hometown of Nephi, Utah, the band intentionally leaves out any defining characteristics so that the listener can fill in the blanks with similar stories and places they have experienced first-hand. These quotes, along with their dark, murky undertones, construct the feeling of a depressed town where tourists stop only for gas and maybe a meal. A place where businesses have left and technology has abandoned. A place that we have failed.

From here, the band sways into frame with a slightly-out-of-place folk riff. The lyrics walk a fine line, occasionally stumbling over themselves as Flowers weaves a story of a character addicted to “Hillbilly Heroin Pills.” In their best moments, the song’s verses are a beautifully lived-in portrayal of middle America. “West Hills” strikes me much in the same way as Waxahatchee’s “Arkadelphia,” where the depiction comes across as equal parts reserved and revering. It’s the kind of perspective that you can only gain by living in a place like this. Even with one-off lines that occasionally pop up and hit you like a rake, the searing guitar solo that comes in at the climax of the track more than makes up for it. 

After the opener, “Quiet Town” begins with another field recording, this time with a more suicidal bent. The sinister nature of this sample is soon undercut by a radiant synth and peppy drum beat. It feels a little disconnected, but within two lines of the song, you get so wrapped up in the narrative that it almost doesn’t matter. There are lyrics that touch on opioids and the small town cliche of people feeling safe enough to not lock their doors. As these trite observations mount, there’s a harmonica solo, because, of course there is. Even though I recognize it as uninspired… I can’t pretend that it doesn’t hit. That’s what’s both impressive and confusing about Pressure Machine; even when things feel predictable or hackneyed, they’re still committed

Throughout the album, there are flatfooted lyrics like “In this barbed wire town of barbed wire dreams” and questionable similies like “Small town girl, Coca Cola grin, honeysuckle skin.” Still, those examples only stick out like a sore thumb because the vocals are so crystal clear in the mix. There’s no bombast to hide the cornball heartland rock pastiche like there was on Sam’s Town or Imploding the Mirage. These are also more committed character studies than anything the band has ever done before, so maybe it’s just a byproduct of Flowers failing to put himself in the narrator’s shoes properly. Even when individual lines fall flat, the band is committed enough (and my love for Springsteen is great enough) that it all feels worth it. You get the sense that the band is taking lots of big swings, so it still feels admirable even when they miss.

Thanks to the fascinating but intentionally drab quotes found at the start of most songs, the tracks can sometimes start with literally negative energy. Once the band starts up, the songs generally follow the same structure beginning with a campfire smolder and building their way up to a triumphant guitar solo or a passionate chorus. In this sense, it feels like you get the best of both worlds, sometimes tipping more into Darkness on the Edge of Town territory than Nebraska. The 90° desert drive of Mirage has faded, but these tracks thrive in the early morning light at that moment right before the sun comes up. 

Despite all of the lyrical cliches, the uninspired emulation, the needless Phoebe Bridgers feature, and the jarring transitions between mood-setting field recordings and instrumentation, I adored Pressure Machine upon first listen. The most critical thing I can say about it is that the record sometimes feels split in two conflicting directions. Nebraska worked because it felt stark the entire time. On Pressure Machine, songs can begin with a dark slice-of-life tale that feels like it’s leading up to a piece as forboding and wretched as “Nebraska,” but instead, we get something like “In The Car Outside,” which sounds like it could have fit in anywhere on the back-half of Mirage

Interestingly enough, the band also released an Abridged version of Pressure Machine, which cuts out roughly five minutes of running time simply by removing the field recordings and getting straight to the tasty jams. Especially when compared to the nearly identical copy of “Pressure Machine” with no asterisks or parenthesis, it’s hard to view the abridged version as the “definitive” rendition of the album since it feels more like these songs exist solely for radio edits and playlist placements. It’s mainly just disappointing that the samples, the press cycle, the cover, nearly everything implied that these songs were going to be dark and sorrowful. I guess when compared to the rest of The Killers discography they are, but they never quite plumb the same depths as Nebraska.

In retrospect, I think it might be it’s impossible for an artist of The Killers stature (or Springsteen’s, for that matter) to swing a solo acoustic album like Nebraska in 2021. There’s a major label and millions of dollars behind Pressure Machine, so this record can’t be that big of a risk. Even if it’s only one or two songs, something on here still needs to be able to fit in on a stadium tour setlist. This album was never going to be a collection of “State Trooper”-level songs because The Killers don’t have the restraint for that. 

They also don’t have the balls to end the record on a crushing one-two-punch like “My Father’s House” into “Reason to Believe.” In the final two tracks of Nebraska, Springsteen offers up possibly one of the saddest songs in his entire catalog, then chases it with a four-minute ray of hope found in the resolute nature of the people depicted throughout the album. This leads to an effect where the listener goes from an extreme low and then experiences an unexpected optimistic uplift that breaks through the entire LP like a holy sunbeam. Instead, The Killers wrap things up with a mildly-uplifting title track followed by a predictable slow-build choral ballad.

But do I need the restraint or the balls? Not necessarily. While occasionally disjointed, these songs still scratch an itch, and it almost doesn’t matter how they do it. I came into Pressure Machine in search of pensive sentiments, folksy slice-of-life stories, and a harmonica or two. I got all that and a little extra fanfare, but I’m not mad about it. We may never get another Nebraska from an artist the size of The Killers, and that makes me a little sad. That doesn’t mean smaller, lesser-known artists aren't creating that type of music, but it sure would have been fun to watch Flowers and company try. 

I suppose when you draw (and invite) comparisons to Springsteen, you’re going to get a lot of them. Is it unfair for me to judge this new Killers album by comparing it to one of the greatest heartland folk-rock albums of all time? Of course. Does that mean I can’t enjoy it on its own merits? Not at all. 

Pressure Machine takes the winning ingredients of The Killers’ discography and melds them into one singular 50-minute experience that manages to feel unique. This record takes the personable human tales of Sam’s Town weaves those stories together with the production and style that made their last record stick. Unfortunately for The Killers, what made their last record stick was doing an impression of the greatest living American singer-songwriter, so you’re always going to exist in that shadow. On its own, Pressure Machine is a somber middle ground between Sam’s Town and Imploding the Mirage. Only time will tell how often I venture to that dust-covered well. 

Catbite – Nice One | Album Review

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I’m not sure if you’ve heard the news, but ska is back. Like, back back. Well, it’s not like it ever left, but after a year and change of staying in our homes, perhaps people have decided to not be so self-serious. It’s easy to point to this ska revival as being akin to the reappraisal of nü metal, but I don’t think they quite reflect one another. The return of nü metal has more to do with it being accepted as smarter than people had initially given it credit for. The staying power and swathes of influence of bands like Deftones and Slipknot finds the genre en vogue, with artists like Rina Sawayama and Loathe putting new spins on its sonic touchstones. This is not the case with ska. 

Musically, this current moment in ska-story feels less like a new wave and more of a return to the sunburnt skate punk of third wave ska that invaded the mainstream in the ’90s. What makes ska great is that it overflows with exuberance, which bands like No Doubt and Rancid understood. They took the infectious choruses of The Specials and Oingo Boingo and morphed them into anthems by adding heavy power chords and gang vocals that every kid in the crowd could shout. Somewhere along the way, people grew tired of this bountiful joy and cast ska into the gutter. A new generation of musicians found ska lying there helpless and have dusted it off so that it may thrive once again. 

Catbite is one of these savior bands. The Philadelphia quartet’s sophomore LP, Nice One, is a gleeful slice of ska-punk that hearkens back to the genre’s heyday. The album is a strong piece of power pop, and its sole purpose is to have fun. Opening track “Asinine Aesthetic” catapults Nice One into your ears as frontperson Brittany Luna belts about posers over a chorus of “ooo-sha-la-la’s” and rapid guitar upstrokes. Lead single, “Call Your Bluff” is an endlessly hummable ripper that rails against wack posturing. Meanwhile, “Not Ur Baby” introduces a touch of melancholy without sacrificing Catbite’s ability to craft large radio-friendly hooks.

Nice One is an example of a band understanding their strengths and leaning all the way into them. What sets Catbite apart from so many groups, regardless of genre, is that they have a powerhouse singer in Brittany Luna. They know the rules; when you have a talent like Luna fronting the band, you gotta make big songs that get the crowd moving. Along with slick production courtesy of Davey Warsop, Catbite keep things simple in order to support Luna’s spectacular performances. While Catbite’s self-titled debut features such moments, the album comes across as a group still learning who they are. Nice One does not include its predecessor’s vibeier jams like “Already Gone,” instead, the songs on the group’s sophomore album get straight to the point, even on the mid-tempo rocksteady tracks, “Stay” and “Bad Influence.”

Like many power pop albums, Nice One falls prey to frontloading the tracklist. The songs on the back half are by no means lackluster, but when the first half is wall-to-wall bangers, it can be hard as a listener to keep up with the band’s pace. Perhaps the album could be better served with a more even distribution so as to give each song its due, but nailing the perfect song order might be one of the hardest things to do in music. Thankfully, Nice One is a relatively brief album, so any lull that might be experienced is momentary.

With Nice One, Catbite have proven themselves worthy of being amongst the new standard-bearers of ska. Like their contemporaries Ska Tune Network, We Are the Union, and Bad Operation, Catbite are shifting the perception of ska away from the unsavory white dude aesthetic that partially maligned the genre in the ‘90s, instead centering it on the joy that the music brings. Today’s ska is a safe space where anyone, regardless of race, sexual preference, and gender identity, can express themselves and skank their hearts out. Perhaps the demand for inclusion alone is enough for the current ska scene to be considered a fourth wave? Honestly, I’m not sure, and the more time I spend thinking about criteria is time away from enjoying the music. With Nice One, Catbite aren’t looking to reinvent the wheel; rather they are putting new air in the tires so the car can keep on cruising.


Connor lives in San Francisco with his partner and their cat, Toni. Connor has an MFA in creative writing and is working toward becoming a community college professor. When he isn’t listening to music or writing about killer riffs, Connor is obsessing over coffee and sandwiches.

Follow him on Twitter or Instagram.

VIAL – LOUDMOUTH | Album Review

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There’s a special type of baggage that comes with being a “TikTok Band.” It’s not uncommon to see Tiktokers who also happen to make music express their reluctance to promote their songs on the app for fear of such stigma. This phenomenon also goes both ways with groups like Beach Bunny, who have enjoyed “hit” TikTok songs, but refuse to let themselves be defined by that success. With the lines between “art” and “content” becoming increasingly blurred, the desire for such separation is understandable (not to mention the unsavory company that TikTok musicians may find themselves among). But unlike the now-infamous trio of pop-punk girlbosses, VIAL’s rage runs deeper than Manic Panic hair and performative vulgarity— as does their collaborative spirit. They’ve embraced the “TikTok band” label and everything that comes with it, sharing goofy videos about their idiosyncratic fashion choices and how they found their drummer on Tinder, all the while using the platform to promote their band. Perhaps most importantly, the rapport the band members have with one another feels natural. Their friendship seems like a genuine necessity of their creative process rather than a tacked-on marketing gimmick. 

VIAL are musicians, not influencers, and on their sophomore LP, LOUDMOUTH, they’re making pop-punk for the Extremely Online. Their targets are often digital age villains like the irony bros and devil’s advocates they roast on the roaring album opener, “Ego Death.” Lyrics like “What about your life on Twitter?/What about me makes you bitter?/I won’t be your babysitter!” make it clear from the get-go that VIAL are taking their riot grrrl roots and updating them for the 21st century.

That’s not the only way that VIAL draws inspiration from the groundbreaking genre while filling in some of its blind spots. For decades, the riot grrrl movement has been rightfully criticized for being overwhelmingly white, cis, and privileged. VIAL find themselves in good company with artists like Meet Me At The Altar, Nova Twins, illuminati hotties, and Pom Pom Squad, who are bringing refreshing inclusivity to the riot grrrl revival. Nonbinary identity and rejection of gender roles are central to VIAL’s music— as it says in their social media bios, they are NOT a girl band.

Even when VIAL’s influences are apparent, they manage to put an original spin on the ideas of their foremothers. Songs like “Roadkill” and “Piss Punk” see them channeling early Sleater-Kinney as they take aim at sexism in the music industry. Inspiration from punk predecessors like Bikini Kill and Bratmobile is clear in lead vocalist Taylor Kraemer’s snarky, flippant delivery on “Planet Drool” and in the song’s schoolyard taunt intro: “bratty, bitchy, money-hungry/ruin the fun for everybody” is chanted in unison over Miss Mary Mack-style hand claps. Standout single “Violet” is a power-pop ballad about queer longing and the confusion between romantic and platonic feelings. Its title-- along with its plucky guitar riffs and rolling snare-heavy drum fills --call to mind the riot grrrl classic of the same name from one of the genre’s most controversial icons. 

All this being said, some of their efforts to make riot grrrl sound original and up-to-date are less fruitful than others. Lines like “I can’t begin to explain how much that I fucking hate you/you fucked me up/you talk too much/and I will never date you” come off more whiny and juvenile than subversive. “Therapy Pt. II” (the sequel to “Therapy” from their debut album Grow Up) leans on straw feminist sloganeering— if sloppy rhyming of “get therapy” with “toxic masculinity” doesn’t give you enough second-hand embarrassment, ad-libs like “plus you’re really bad in bed!” will have listeners questioning how far VIAL’s gender politics have progressed past 2016 Tumblr discourse.

Their talents shine brightest when they’re making spunky pop songs that are sweet without being saccharine. Cuts like “Thumb” and “Something More” incorporate tinny drums, bouncy surf-rock guitar progressions, and infectiously catchy hooks destined to delight fans of The Regrettes and the aforementioned Beach Bunny. “Vodka Lemonade,” a ridiculously fun song about some decidedly un-fun things-- social anxiety, self-doubt -- features captivating stop-and-start progression, sparkling vocal harmonies, and a kickass horn solo. Even during moments of frustration, uncertainty, and despair, VIAL aren’t above joking about drinking their weight in caffeine and being left alone while their friends go out without them. “21” is an excellent album closer, a quarter-life crisis anthem whose sincerity doesn’t come at the sacrifice of its sense of humor. This seems to be the key ingredient to VIAL’s recipe-- no matter what they do, they’re gonna have fun with it, and we’re lucky that they’ve brought us along for the ride.


Grace Robins-Somerville is a writer from Brooklyn, New York. You can find her on Instagram @grace_roso and on Twitter @grace_roso.

Celebration Guns – The Visiting Years | EP Premiere

Celebration Guns – The Visiting Years EP

As you may have heard, pop-punk is having a post-pandemic revival, and 5th wave emo is in full swing. Arizona indie rockers Celebration Guns are doing more than just riding the wave. They’ve been pumping out catchy, hook-heavy, Midwest Emo-adjacent bangers since the mid-2010s, and their latest project with Chillwavve Records is no exception. The Visiting Years sees them seamlessly interweaving poppy melodies, charmingly fuzzy production, and math-y guitar riffs that’ll draw in fans of American Football and Foxing. This is all paired with gang vocals that practically beg to be screamed along to at post-vax shows. Lyrically, these songs are anthemic and emotionally resonant, without taking themselves too seriously. 

Celebration Guns are occasionally anthemic to a fault. On “The Tools That Take From Us,” they run into a problem similar to the one that kneecapped the most recent IDLES album, where it becomes a bit too obvious that they’re trying to write a capital-P Protest Song about these troubling and uncertain times we’re living in. A cringe-inducing line like “I can’t wait to hear how I’ve been dumb/A snowflake and liberal to some” cheapens an otherwise thoughtful track about a generation’s frustration with the policymakers who’ve failed them. The COVID-19 pandemic had artists brimming with “now more than ever” energy-- often well-meaning but misplaced --and Celebration Guns are not immune to these moments of heavy-handedness. This isn’t to say that the concerns they’re expressing become devoid of their power, but their unsubtle wink and nod swiftly derails the song, making its youthful urgency seem cloying and juvenile. 

However, it’s not as though this borderline immaturity never works in their favor-- quite the contrary. With its driving drum beat and fun pop-punk hooks, “Obnoxious. Loud. Undoubtedly Fulfilled” stands out as a sweet and rowdy ode to finding your niche both creatively and socially. It begins with a lament about being “picked last by people that you don’t like for a game you never cared to play” and leads us to a misfit utopia where the things that make us feel ostracized are the same things that allow us to find community and artistic fulfillment. It’s a song that speaks to the deeply relatable experience of the reluctant outcast who feigns disinterest in fitting in because there’s nothing less cool than trying to be cool and failing. Like Michelle Zauner of Japanese Breakfast expressed in a recent installment of her music video breakdown series, “there’s this kind of fear that you want to fit in, you just don’t...it’s just [about] finding something of your own that makes not fitting in worthwhile.” In a similar vein, the song’s narrator recognizes that he isn’t above caring what the cool kids think of him and admits that at times he’s been “desperate to say that he’s better than them.” It’s vulnerable, multi-faceted storytelling like this that makes Celebration Guns’ music so human and so welcoming, as if they’re inviting you to join them “up on the hill” with all the other freaks and weirdos. We get to follow our gang of misfits on their journey to the place where they can revel in their uncoolness and recognize their outcast status as an integral part of their triumph. On a more meta level, lines like “I never thought I’d see acceptance for who I could be/I never got to say thank you for who I am today” come off as a group of bandmates expressing their gratitude to and for each other. The result is heartwarming without becoming overly precious. 

Celebration Guns’ optimism is not without its obstacles. The EP’s title track has lead vocalist Justin Weir opening up about his experiences with chronic illness and suicidal ideation. The recurring themes of survival and perseverance coexist with-- and are necessitated by --circumstances that make living feel like an impossible thing to do. “I’m tired of telling lies so you won’t worry about me,” he sings, clinging to his ability to stay alive in a body that’s trying to destroy itself and a world that’s falling apart. The song’s emotional climax comes when he addresses the listener directly-- “if you’re hearing this, I’m still alive.” It’s a duality that’s present throughout the project-- the bitterness of adversity and the sweetness of survival are intertwined, a reminder that sometimes survival is a victory in and of itself. The Visiting Years is a life-affirming project that boldly follows its bittersweet heart. The result is obnoxious, loud, and undoubtedly fulfilling. 

The Visiting Years is out July 30th on Chillwavve Records.


Grace Robins-Somerville is a writer from Brooklyn, New York. You can find her on Instagram @grace_roso and on Twitter @grace_roso.

Kevin Devine – No One's Waiting Up For Me Tonight | EP Review

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For nearly two decades, Brooklyn’s Kevin Devine has carved out cross-genre niches in his musical pursuits, whether it’s with emo cult favorite Miracle of 86, folk rock supergroup Bad Books, or collaborations with the likes of Craig Finn and Meredith Graves on his Divinyls Splits Series. Devine’s latest solo project sees him going back to singer-songwriterly basics. No One’s Waiting Up For Me Tonight is wistful and introspective, allowing for Devine’s delicate melodies and thoughtful lyricism to take center stage. Though at times the moody-broody Elliott Smith worship goes a bit too far-- lines like “God transmissions through my higher mind” warrant an eye roll --Devine manages to build off of his indie folk influences in a striking way.

Take the standout track “I’ve Never Been Happier Than I Was In That Picture,” a rose-tinted waltz through memories of a past romance. As he paints vivid scenes of still life drawings in deserts and barefoot fountain dances during a Brooklyn heatwave, Devine gives thanks to a former lover for the moments of joy that have been preserved by memory. His bittersweet gratitude is backed by a shimmering, Sufjan-esque string arrangement-- the most elaborate on an otherwise instrumentally sparse EP. 

These songs float between appreciation and regret, with memory serving as the throughline that tethers them to one another. There are times where it would seem easy for Devine to overindulge in nostalgia, an impulse which he artfully resists. The EP’s most striking moments come when Devine undercuts his own tendency toward romanticism with the occasional blunt one-liner: “you weren’t peaceful, you weren’t in love,” he sings on closing track “All There Is Now.” His ability to embrace both the beauty and the ugliness in his reflections on the past strengthens each emotional blow. The regretful “Taking Shape” juxtaposes Devine “coughing bloody yolk, threading a minefield blind” with Simon And Garfunkel-style vocal harmonies. Meanwhile, “Lakes On The Moon” is a stripped-down acoustic statement of humility, forgiveness, and loss. 

Composed in quarantine, No One’s Waiting Up For Me Tonight is imbued with anxieties about an uncertain future as well as the promise of personal growth. It’s a testament to self-reflection, but more than that, it shows Devine questioning how he can use this period of solitude to head into the unknown. Even in its loneliest moments, there remains a quiet hope. 


Grace Robins-Somerville is a writer from Brooklyn, New York. You can find her on Instagram @grace_roso and on Twitter @grace_roso.