Plans

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (581 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: Death Cab for Cutie (See All Albums by Death Cab for Cutie)
  • Date Released: Aug 29, 2005

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Atlantic Records

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 44:26

eMusic Review

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Laura Leebove

Production Editor

Laura Leebove is a Brooklyn-based music journalist whose writing has appeared in various publications including Billboard, Spinner.com, Venus Zine, Critical Mob...more »

09.02.10
Looking to the future with a wider audience in tow
2005 | Label: Atlantic Records

After Death Cab for Cutie's 2003 album Transatlanticism led to countless song placements in TV shows and films, it seemed like a natural progression for the band to leave longtime indie Barsuk for a major label — Atlantic. (Adding to the band's high profile: Give Up — the debut LP from the Postal Service, Death Cab frontman Ben Gibbard's project with Dntel's Jimmy Tamborello — had been released only months before.) Transatlanticism had been the group's cleanest work to date — lush, cinematic layers of sound had replaced the subtle fuzz that used to loom over every track — and Plans follows a similar formula. But where Transatlanticism was about the past — breakups, memories, long-distance relationships — Plans finds Gibbard looking to the future. Ultimately, it's a question of who's going to love you and, therefore, who's going to watch you die. That's to say: The lyrics haven't gotten much happier, but the band's found its sound and is sticking to it.

Several of the songs revolve around love after death: In the ethereal single "Soul Meets Body," Gibbard sings "If the silence takes you/ Then I hope it takes me too;" in the stripped-down-acoustic "I Will… read more »

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Change the Plan

Jouissance

Prior to Plans release, I got an email from DCFC claiming that the only difference with the new albums would be the logo'A'(for Atlantic) on them. They didn't clue us in that they would also lose their spine in the process. The guitars here with an exception of a couple solid tracks are weak. It's a tepid, watered-down album that goes against the normal DCFC grain on the first 4 albums, especially the first 3. Major label to blame? Perhaps. But Narrow Stairs was a nice, pseudo-return to form. Writing songs at Big Sur never hurts.

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Yes, please

Steelparadox

In my opinion, this album is the apex (so far) of Death Cab's very great musical career. We Have the Facts was good, Photobooth was great, and Transatlanticism was ever better than that. Plans tops all of those albums, though. At least in my humble opinion.

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eMusic Features

Icon: Death Cab for Cutie

By Chris Ryan

You can imagine Ben Gibbard's late-'90s Bellingham, Washington, bedroom; a copy of Tape Op magazine, well thumbed-through, lying on the floor; a Low album on the record player; a Tascam 4-track recorder sitting on a nightstand, with an acoustic guitar leaning against it. Death Cab for Cutie, the solo project Gibbard would have been working on at the time, taking a break from his band All-Time Quarterback, sprung from these somewhat modest beginnings. And the… more »

Death Cab’s Chris Walla On UGGs, Nine Inch Nails, and Bacon as the New Vegan

By Marc Hogan

Chris Walla is best known as the guitarist for Death Cab for Cutie, but the Pacific Northwest musician is also a solo artist and veteran producer in his own right. But while Walla produced Codes & Keys, Death Cab's first album since 2009's chart-topping Narrow Stairs, he delegated the mixing duties to someone else: Alan Moulder, whose name has appeared in the liner notes to many of the greatest alternative-rock albums from the past… more »

They Say All Media Guide

For your consideration: a wildly successful indie rock band with a legion of followers on an equally successful, highly credible independent label makes the jump to major-label powerhouse Atlantic, leading to much chagrin and speculation among its fans as they awaited with bated breath for what would happen to the group. The result was For Your Own Special Sweetheart, inarguably the most polished and fully realized album of Dischord alumnus Jawbox’s career. Fast forward ten years and you find Barsuk’s Death Cab for Cutie in the same position, making the same move. A new label, a larger crowd (thanks to their repeated appearances on The OC), and a side project of Ben Gibbard (Postal Service) that very well overshadowed the success of his main project. All of the moves were perfectly aligned to take the little band that could into the rock stratosphere. But the difference between Jawbox and Death Cab for Cutie was that For Your Own Special Sweetheart went on to be the finest release of Jawbox’s canon. Plans definitely comes close to that mark, but falls slightly short. In comparison to the dry, raw production of Transatlanticism, Plans is warm and polished, the kind of album expected from a band obsessed with the sound of Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours. Chris Walla does an amazing job bringing the group’s sound in a different direction than before without compromising too many of the things that made the group sound great to begin with. Thematically, Plans is the Death Cab for Cutie suitable for graduate students, world-weary and wiser from their experiences, realizing they can no longer be love-starved 20-somethings without a clue yet hopelessly cursed to face the same issues. And there’s merit to be had in acknowledging that maturity, for even blink-182 figured out their age and released their “serious” album. Gibbard’s wispy, poetic lyrics (which could easily have been stolen from Aimee Mann’s dressing room while she wasn’t looking) still remain an artery from which the rest of the band beats and are some of his finest ever, but this time around the band aligns itself more with a series of emotional murmurs rather than a heart attack. The album winds its way from one ballad to the next, with brief stopovers at moderately up-tempo numbers to help break things up a bit. And it’s this sense of resignation that either makes or breaks the album, depending on which Death Cab for Cutie is your favorite: the melancholic, hopeless romantic or the one who wears its heart on its sleeve with unbridled energy and passion. If Transatlanticism was Gibbard’s Pet Sounds and Postal Service was SMiLE, then this is definitely Wild Honey, loved by adoring new fans and those who enjoy the ballads. But those hoping for a bit more — for the bar to be raised higher — might find this a mildly predictable exercise in Gibbard exorcising the demons of Phil Collins that haunt him. Plans is both a destination and a transitional journey for the group, one that sees the fulfillment of years of toiling away to develop their ideas and sound. But it’s with the completion of those ideas that band is faced with a new set of crossroads and challenges to tread upon: to stay the course and suffer stagnation or try something bold and daringly new with their future. Which road they’ll take will make all the difference. – Rob Theakston

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