release date: Jun. 25, 2021
format: digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Dave Sardy, Jacknife Lee
label: Epic Records - nationality: USA
Track highlights: 1. "Fuck Your Acid Trip" - 2. "We Are Between" (live) - 3. "We’re Lucky" - 5. "Wooden Soldiers" - 7. "The Sun Hasn't Left" - 8. "Lace Your Shoes" - 9. "Never Fuck a Spider on the Fly" - 10. "Leave a Light On" - 11. "Japanese Trees" - 12. "Back to the Middle"
7th studio album by Modest Mouse follows almost six full years after Strangers to Ourselves (Mar. 2015), and once again the line-up is an issue with Darrin Wiener having briefly been a band member but more seriously, Lisa Molinaro and Jim Fairchild both left the band shortly prior to the album release; and then 1½ years later, founding member Jeremiah Green died.
Stylistically, the album introduces a new sound thanks to the inclusion of electronic instrumentation and a neo-psychedelic tone. Drum machines, synths, and musical loops provides the album with a more modern expression, although, traditional rock instrumentation is still very much part of the band's sound - the focus has just changed making more room for electronics. Isaac Brock still fills out every song with his characteristic vocal, and as is mostly the case with this band the single tracks may point in various directions but the album still maintains a solid sensation of a coherent product.
Not a lot binds this together with Good News for People... from 2004, or any earlier albums for that matter, but it follows closely on the same path as the 2015 album. In that regard the band has always been evolving - constantly moving further down their own evolutionary road and it's not too difficult to follow the whole progression. Their biggest stylistic leap happened when they released their best-selling 2004 album and since then the road has been a bit more predictable, which by no means is the same as uninspiring 'cause Modest Mouse is still a most daring band who could easily have chosen to go with a broader fan base.
I generally enjoy this new album. It's really good, still growing on me - it hasn't reached 'exceptional' nor 'great' but it doesn't appear to have any fillers, so it's definitely worth knowing.