The Killers' great gift is that they -- and in particular their frontman, Brandon Flowers -- have utterly no recognition of the ridiculous. More than that, they're drawn to the ridiculous, piecing together sounds that don't belong together, reaching far beyond their grasp, aiming for profundity and slipping into silliness. All this weighed the band down mightily on Sam's Town, their convoluted Americana theme park of a sophomore album, all false façades and paper-thin pretension, but on its 2008 sequel, Day & Age, the Killers shrink the canvas and brighten their palette, opting for a big sound over big themes. Since the Killers are at their core poseurs and not prophets, style over substance is the right move and Day & Age has style for miles and miles, exceeding even their debut, Hot Fuss, in its stainless steel gleam. If anything, Hot Fuss was a little too monochromatic in its obsession with '80s synth rock, a criticism that can hardly be leveled at Day & Age, a record that stitches together sounds with an almost blissfully idiotic abandon.
Condition: NEW.Drilled case.
TRACK LISTING
1 Losing Touch 4:15
2 Human 4:05
3 Spaceman 4:44
4 Joy Ride 3:33
5 A Dustland Fairytale 3:45
6 This Is Your Life 3:41
7 I Can't Stay 3:06
8 Neon Tiger 3:05
9 The World We Live In 4:40
10 Goodnight, Travel Well 6:51
|