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Gang of Losers

by

The Dears

 
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Gang of Losers
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How to remain gloomy when the recording budgets alone is double what you used to live on in a year.

  • We Say...

    Boasting a virulent strain of melancholy, the Dears sophomore album No Cities Left delighted those who felt Elbow could do with being a little more miserable. The NME — flattered that this Montreal sextet should be so competent at such artful Britpop noir — duly welcomed singer Murray Lightburn as a bedsit poet to match Morrissey at his most operatic. (Lightburn — a huge fan — duly cried when Moz asked the band to support him.)

    All of which brings us to the tricky part: how to remain gloomy when the artist's garret has been replaced by a gleaming tour bus and the recording budgets alone are double what you used to live on in a year?

    For a soul as sensitive as Lightburn, of course, this is even more reason to be depressed. “The world is really gonna love you…” he sighs mockingly in "Ticket to Immortality," dreading that first gold disc, whilst "Death or Life We Want You" is as gloomy as anything on Nirvana’s In Utero. With the lush orchestral arrangements replaced by a hard-wired, guitar-driven sound, Lightburn runs riot, mocking his own position in the indie scene as the son of Belizian immigrants ("Whites Only Party") and musing “What kind of hell am I in?” amidst the funk inflections of "I Fell Deep." Darker and more demanding that No Cities Left, the mood is one of resilience and, ultimately, optimism, best summed up by the title track. “You and I are on the outside of almost everything,” Lightburn sighs, watching from the sidelines as a mad world goes about its business.

  • They Say...

    After the orchestral extravaganza of 2004's fantastic No Cities Left, the Dears didn't leave themselves much room on their next album to go even bigger, lusher, more orchestral. It would be too much, and they knew it, so instead they chose to strip down their arrangements, make them simpler and less ornate. This isn't to say that Gang of Losers is just Murray Lightburn playing an acoustic guitar and crooning forlornly, but it does mean that the Dears seem to have traded in their strings and horns for more straightforward electric guitar and keyboard riffs. "Ticket to Immortality," the first single, still features Lightburn majestically singing, "I hang out with all the pariahs" (he is almost obsessed with the idea of not fitting in -- it's a theme that continues throughout the record), but it also follows a fairly standard verse-chorus type formula; there are none of the eight-minute expositions found on No Cities Left. In fact, most of the songs are a lot more "standardly constructed," but done so in a way that keeps the band's dramatic Queen-meets-the Smiths aesthetic intact without overwhelming listeners with myriad undulations and structural dissections. There's still the propensity for classical resolutions and progressions, but it's much more of a rock record than their last. "Bandwagoneers" is a lovely piece with solid guitars and a smooth intensity that comes not only from the lush instrumentation but also from the fluctuations in Lightburn's voice. He offers a wider range of emotion than he has before, moving from contemplation to anger in a single phrase ("Why can't everyone live out happily ever after?" he wonders as the song begins circling around itself, finally fading out into an electric guitar rant); equally good is the poppy "Hate Then Love," which keeps the ascending scales while still incorporating catchy melodies and simple chords. "I Fell Deep" begins with something like an interpretation of the piano riff from Radiohead's "Pyramid Song" and turns bluesy with an organ and background chorus, almost fit for musical theater, while "Whites Only Party" is lyrically complicated but sticks to basic, quick-moving acoustic guitar and piano with a Western feel, complete with a frontier-town-inspired guitar solo. Still, everything on the album is very much the Dears, very much how they've always presented themselves, very much what they've always done. They're a little less baroque, they're a little less depressing (maybe Lightburn's marriage to bandmate Natalia Yanchak helped things here), but they're just as emotional and affecting, which makes Gang of Losers very good indeed.

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