eMusic Review 0
Following 2008's Dear Science, TV on the Radio took a year off. When they reconvened for this album, Brooklyn's local heroes had apparently decided to go about things differently. They purr more than they pounce these days: Their fearsome rhythm section has been dialed way back, serving more as a textural detail than a pulse. The band's latent romantic tendencies have come into tighter focus, too. "If the world all falls apart/ I'm gonna keep your heart," goes one chorus, and although they're still convinced that the world is pretty likely to fall apart (the most cacophonous, old-school TVOTR song here, "No Future Shock," is a call to "shake it like it's the end of time"), this is as close as they've ever come to writing an album of love songs.
Not that they've gotten mushy — for every near-beatless, near-orchestral tone-poem like "Killer Crane," there's a dissonant stomper like "Caffeinated Consciousness." Sometimes, both approaches exist within the same song: This band's name implies multimedia, so it's no surprise that their favorite trick is to pile radically disparate sounds and ideas on top of one another. ("Repetition" owes a smidgen to the Fall song of the same name, but… read more »