BRIGHT EYES – FIVE DICE ALL THREES CD

22,00 

  1. Five Dice
  2. Bells and Whistles
  3. El Capitan
  4. Bas Jan Ader
  5. Tiny Suicides
  6. All Threes
  7. Rainbow Overpass
  8. Hate
  9. Real Feel 105°
  10. Spun Out
  11. Trains Still Run on Time
  12. The Time I Have Left
  13. Tin Soldier Boy

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Five Dice, All Threes is a record of uncommon intensity and tenderness,

 

communal exorcism and personal excavation. These are, of course, qualities

 

that fans have come to expect from Bright Eyes, nearly three decades into

 

their career. The tight-knit band of Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis, and Nate

 

Walcott tends to operate in distinct sweeping movements: each unique in it’s

 

sound and story but unified by a sense of ambition and ever-growing

 

emotional stakes. Even with this rich history behind them, these new songs

 

exude a visceral thrill like nothing they have attempted before. Oberst has

 

always sung in a voice that conveys a sense of life-or-death gravity. At times

 

throughout Five Dice, All Threes, you may feel worried for him; other times, he

 

may seem like the only one with the clarity to get us out of this mess.

 

On the self-produced album, Bright Eyes embrace the elusive quality that

 

has made them so enduring and influential across generations and genres,

 

bringing their homespun sound from an Omaha bedroom to devoted

 

audiences around the world. In Oberst’s songwriting lies a promise that our

 

loneliest thoughts and feelings can take on grander shapes when passed

 

between friends, blasted through speakers, or shouted among crowds. This

 

time around, the band invites such like-minded voices onto the record with

 

them, with notable guest appearances from Cat Power (“All Threes”), The

 

National’s Matt Berninger (“The Time I Have Left”), and Alex Levine, the

 

frontman of the New York punk band The So So Glos, who co-wrote several

 

songs and shares a climactic verse in the surging “Rainbow Overpass.”

 

When they hit the studio with Oberst’s longtime bandmates-the multiinstrumentalist and producer Mike Mogis, the keyboardist and arranger Nate

 

Walcott-they opted for a fast-paced approach that drew inspiration from

 

formative influences like The Replacements and Frank Black. They sought

 

textures that burst from the mix like gnarly splashes of paint on a blank

 

canvas; they opted for first takes and spontaneous decisions. Five Dice, All

 

Threes thrashes and squirms and resists classification. In the brilliant expanse

 

of “El Capitan,” they blend a galloping rhythm you might find in a Johnny Cash

 

standard with a swell of funereal horns, shouted vocals, and lyrics that read

 

like a sobering farewell between twin souls. “So they’re burning you an effigy,”

 

Oberst sings. “Well, that happens to me all the time!”

 

For every striking turn in his lyrics, the band knows just how to

 

complement him. On one level, Five Dice, All Threes may be the most fun

 

album in the Bright Eyes catalog, filled with singalong hooks and buzzing

 

performances. And yet, sitting alongside these adrenalized rockers that sound

 

beamed in directly from the garage, you will find contemplative, psychedelic

 

material like the heartbreaking “Tiny Suicides” and “All Threes,” a song whose

 

jazzy piano solo and free-associative lyrics feel totally unprecedented in the

 

Bright Eyes catalog.

 

As per usual, the music comes loaded with subtext that invites deep

 

listening-the signature touch of a band who has always honored the album as

 

it’s own exalted work of art. In the game of threes, the titular move would

 

indicate a perfect roll. Perfection, however, means something different in the

 

world of Bright Eyes, where our flaws are what grants us authority and finding

 

meaning is only possible if we bear witness to the dark, winding journey to

 

get there. On Five Dice, All Threes, Bright Eyes embrace these beliefs with

 

music that feels thrillingly alive, as if we were all in the room with them,

 

shouting along and gaining the strength to move forward together. It doesn’t

 

just sound like classic Bright Eyes. It sounds like their future, too.