eMusic Review 0
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 »