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Death
Cab for Cutie
Transatlanticism
label: Barsuk
released: 10.07.03
our score: 4.0 out of 5.0
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Due in great
part to his collaboration work as 1/2 of The Postal Service, Ben
Gibbard broke out of his relatively unknown status as the voice
behind underground emo group, Death Cab for Cutie, and began being
recognized by many as one of the greater songwriters of today.
It was also due to the surprising success of The Postal Service's
Give Up that Death Cab for Cutie found itself an additional
audience of listeners eager to hear just what else Ben Gibbard
had to say, and what his real band sounded like. Or,
at least that was the case with me.
By simple comparisons,
Transatlanticism (Death Cab for Cutie's fifth album)
is much akin to a single-disc version of The Smashing Pumpkin's
grandiose Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness. There's
the everyman lyrical stature of Gibbard, of course, but there's
also a sense of musicianship here that feels like Melon
Collie (although the over-the-top guitar riffs are thankfully
absent here). Or maybe it's simply because the opening track "The
New Year" is one of the most epic, empowering songs since
Melon Collie's proper opener, "Tonight, Tonight."
But honestly,
Transatlanticism is much more of an indie-rock-bleeding-into-the-mainstream-but-the-lyrics-are-too-deep
kind of record. The band is as sonically tight as one could ever
hope for, and the piano work (over the sound of railcars) on the
album's title track is about as beautifully distant as the lyrics
imply.
Because Transatlanticism
is really an album about love over distance. Songs like the title
track drive this concept home, with lyrics like "And the
distance is quite simply much too far for me to row: it seems
farther than ever before (oh no)." Likewise with "Title
and Registration" (about finding photographs of a time gone
by when searching through a glove compartment) - "And all
I find are souvenirs from better times before the gleam of your
taillights fading East to find yourself a better life."
So where does
leave Transatlanticism as a whole? Well as a whole it's
a damn fine album. There has been definite care in the arrangement
of song order, as each song tends to flow emotionally from one
to the next. And true to its form, it ends on an emotionally distant
note: "But I know it's too late, and I should have given
you a reason to stay."
Maybe he didn't
give reason to his lover, but Death Cab for Cutie are becoming
masters of giving the listener reason to stick around, and maybe
even find out a bit more about who they really are.
15-Jan-2004
9:00 AM

If you
liked Transatlanticism...
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Tracklist:
1.
The New Year
2. Lightness
3. Title And Registration
4. Expo '86
5. The Sound Of Settling
6. Tiny Vessels
7. Transatlanticism
8. Passenger Seat
9. Death Of An Interior Decorator
10. We Looked Like Giants
11. A Lack Of Color
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