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MUSIC

Cage The Elephant Strikes The Match on New Album "Social Cues"

All the songs have their moments of sonic clarity and creativity, but first and foremost, they're tales in the album's mythology of how a heart breaks.

Via Shutterstock

Something heavy, something painful, is left behind on Social Cues.

Cage The Elephant's fifth album is an exercise in catharsis, verging on exorcism. The Kentucky band's strain of infectious, flinty rock reinvents itself with exhilarating intent and depth, as lead singer Matt Shultz pushes his signature yowl to its vocal and emotional limits. The first singles from Social Cues, "Ready To Let Go" and "House Of Glass," sounded oddly contiguous from their last release, Tell Me I'm Pretty, which begged the question of whether or not Cage might have stagnated. In context, though, the songs are refractions of a sonic atmosphere that Cage masterfully sustains for the album's entire length: the sleek, melancholy indie of Tell Me I'm Pretty is (genuinely, lovingly) forged with the fuzzy garage rock of their early days, becoming a testament to their growth as artists. And this sense of culmination is vital to how Social Cues works: the biggest draw of this album isn't its sound, but the story it's telling.

Not only is Social Cues the best-written Cage The Elephant offering to date, it's also conceivably one of the better breakup albums of the the last few years. Social Cues paints a relationship's demise with a painfully vivid brush, illuminating denial, bitterness, hopelessness, and fear in arresting detail. "Don't know if I can play this part much longer," Shultz confesses over the plinking title track, and the album spins out in a hundred directions from this line: fear of what remains when love fades, an excruciating desire for escape, and losing faith in love itself. Social Cues takes the many facets of a breakup, from petty to existential and everything in between, and gives them all generous emotional weight. Listen to the contemplative ballad "Love's The Only Way," the casually callous "Black Madonna," or the nightmare rock of "Night Running" and "Tokyo Smoke"—all the songs have their moments of sonic clarity and creativity, but first and foremost, they're tales in the album's mythology of how a heart breaks.

"Goodbye"—a heartfelt farewell to a relationship, without a shred of irony—closes the album and rightly feels like the end of a long journey. "Goodbye" embraces necessary acceptance as the only conclusion to lost love, an acceptance that does not undo what good might have come out of that love. Cage The Elephant, five albums in, understands the value of letting an ending just be what it is.

Social Cues



Matthew Apadula is a writer and music critic from New York. His work has previously appeared on GIGsoup Music and in Drunk in a Midnight Choir. Find him on Twitter @imdoingmybest.


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MUSIC

Cage the Elephant and the Art of Starting Over

Their fifth studio album is on its way. We examined how the indie rock mainstays hold up to the test of time.

Neil Krug

Cage The Elephant is finally coming back. In music years, it's been a while.

The band's last official release, Tell Me I'm Pretty, came out in 2015, garnering critical acclaim and scooping up a Grammy on the way. In 2017, they released Unpeeled, a compilation featuring live and reimagined versions of songs from all four of their past studio albums, along with a few covers. The album was a welcome holdover, setting the band's normally-hard edged alt-rock over rich string arrangements and soaring choir cuts. Unpeeled stretched the possibilities of Cage The Elephant's sound, and seemed to hint at a sweeping change in the band's sonic aesthetic, another jump like the one from 2013's ragged masterpiece Melophobia to the more sophisticated sound of Tell Me I'm Pretty.

Social Cues, the band's fifth album set to drop April 19th, is heralded by the arrival of two new singles, "Ready To Let Go" and "House of Glass." It's a long-awaited return, and the anticipation is deserved by a band that made their bones in the indie scene by combining bare-knuckled garage rock with a romantic sense of drama. Their music, at its best, inspires a sense of joyful abandon, demanding everything and then some from both listener and performer, culminating in an exhilarating give-and-take that represents the best of what rock can be. (If you need proof, Google their 2014 performance at Terminal 5 in New York and watch frontman Matt Shultz launch himself from a balcony into a scrum of adoring fans: that's what an hour of Cage The Elephant will do to you.)

Cage's first two albums, their self-titled debut and Thank You Happy Birthday, brought fans a frantic kind of borderline-punk rock: Shultz's strung-out howl paired perfectly with the band's lo-fi throttle. But as thrilling as both albums were, early Cage The Elephant teetered on the edge of manic. The moments of thoughtfulness and depth—the lovely "Shake Me Down" and "Right Before My Eyes," in particular— were nearly drowned out by after-burn rockers like "Back Against The Wall" and "Sabertooth Tiger." But, thankfully, a balance was struck on their third album. Melophobia was an enthralling coming-of-age moment for an already-capable band. The album takes flight with songs that explore the grip of desire as nimbly as the grinding passage of time. Cage The Elephant hit their stride when carving out their sound on shredding tracks "Spiderhead" and "Black Widow," the more contemplative rock of "Hypocrite" and "Halo," and the wrenching lovesickness of "Cigarette Daydreams." The perfection of Melophobia presented something of a challenge to everything that came after it: how could later albums maintain that balance between wildness and rumination without losing the band's soul?

Consequently, Tell Me I'm Pretty is something of a comedown from the explosion of Melophobia. Bolstered by Dan Auerbach's sleek and intimate production, Tell Me I'm Pretty manages to sandpaper Cage The Elephant's rougher edges, focusing less on volume and more on the introspection perfected on the last album. It also sounds exhausted: the album unfolds as though something central has been shaken since the explosive popularity of Melophobia. "Cold, Cold, Cold," "Too Late To Say Goodbye," and the exquisitely out-of-nowhere ballad "Sweetie Little Jean" are perfect examples of this change in the band's sound: not only is the lo-fi edge replaced with a more refined indie flare, the lyrics turn wholly from carefree anthems to excoriating self-reflection. The narrative struggles with ambivalence, song after song plagued by doubt and apathy against a polished sonic background. Even as the album ends on the quintessential-Cage strut of "Portuguese Knife Fight," it's clear that a new timbre has been established, one that Cage The Elephant now seems to be stuck in.

The two new singles do have their promising moments. "Ready To Let Go," a slow-scorcher following the story of a failing love, is chilling yet inviting, while "House of Glass" is bracingly odd for a Cage track, with a Cabaret-like camp lurking under Shultz's vocal growl. It's clear that Cage The Elephant hasn't lost their ability to marry deceptively dense verses to a pulsating rock sensibility, but there's a familiarity here, and that's the problem. These songs aren't anything new for them. They sound like they could be B-sides off of Tell Me I'm Pretty. The fuzzy-but-still-curated production polish, the lyrical embrace of apprehension, the telegraphed haze: they're all still right there, picked right up from where the band left them in 2015. It's startling, considering that Cage The Elephant is a group that prides itself on re-invention between albums—either pushing their feral energy to dizzying new heights or employing their abilities in more specific, more authentic songs like "Come A Little Closer" or "Trouble." Cage has never been a band known for playing it safe, but the new singles tread ground that's been trodden before. One album ago, to be exact.

The new singles aside, the fact that Unpeeled exists at all is a testament to Cage's willingness to start over. A compilation album is often regarded unjustly as filler, but Unpeeled at its core is an indication of self-awareness, recontextualizing what makes their music special. That impulse, to build on what came before, is still in Cage The Elephant's makeup. But there's a difference between living in a sound and standing still in it, and Tell Me I'm Pretty doesn't need a sequel, continuing the story without the promise of a next chapter that can stand on its own. "Ready To Let Go" and "House of Glass" are enjoyable, slick, and as rounded as anything the band's come out with before. But these recent offerings are a far cry from the pure caustic joy that first defined the band's unmistakable spirit, and from the balance, they worked so hard for in their last few records.

Each of Cage's albums is constructed in their own particular way, but they always leave room for more, a ceiling that was aching to be broken by a bellowing chorus or a bared guitar line. Cage The Elephant deserves the space they take up: no one else in indie rock sounds quite like they do, or has nearly as much fun doing it. But Social Cues sounds like it might be an unexamined repeat of Tell Me I'm Pretty instead of an answer to it, and with a band that's come as far as Cage has, there's no mistaking the disappointment that comes with hearing songs you could have sworn you'd heard before.


Matthew Apadula is a writer and music critic from New York. His work has previously appeared on GIGsoup Music and in Drunk in a Midnight Choir. Find him on Twitter @imdoingmybest.


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CULTURE

Are These Artists Actually Clones Created by Greedy Music Industry Executives?

Is Ariana Grande just a renovated Mariah Carey? Are Brendan Urie and Patrick Stump dating—or are they the same person? The truth is out there.

Though all music borrows in some way from other music, sometimes bands or artists just sound and/or look uncannily similar to each other.

These similarities raise pressing questions: how and why do these bands sound so alike? Could there be some dark secret behind their successes, some cloning initiative launched once music industry executives realized they could just repackage the same artist under a different name and double their profits?

Regardless of how much of the truth you're willing to see, this list exposes pairs of bands or artists that not only sound the same but also seem to occupy the same cultural purpose, performing the same symbolic and emotional roles for fans everywhere.

1. Cage the Elephant and the Black Keys

Cage the Elephant and the Black Keys are different bands. It's a proven fact. And yet are they? They both feature singers with mid-range voices and vaguely Southern drawls. They both use grungy guitars that sound like they've been filtered through a litany of overdrive pedals. They both make songs that have lyrics—but are the songs really about anything, or are they both just kind of sad attempts to fill the hole created by rock and roll's death?

Objective facts tell us that these bands are indeed different—Cage the Elephant opened for the Black Keys on several tours, and Black Keys frontman Dan Auerbach produced Cage the Elephant's 2015 album and their new 2019 single. But is it so hard to believe that some rip in the fabric of the time-space continuum created a world in which two slightly different iterations of the exact same band can walk around at the same time? Even some of their biggest hits like "Gold on the Ceiling" and "Ain't No Rest for the Wicked" are eerily similar, both relying on ominous bass lines and sparse, punchy guitar hits.

The Black Keys - Gold On The Ceiling [Official Music Video]www.youtube.com

Cage The Elephant - Ain't No Rest For The Wicked (Official Music Video)www.youtube.com

2. Mariah Carey and Ariana Grande

They both have stratospheric ranges, prima donna pop culture royalty and/or meme status, and impressive whistle tones. Sure, Ariana's music is tailored to the ultramodern era, whereas Mariah's occupied a similar space in the late 90's and early 2000's pop canon, but they both embody the image of the magnetic, radiant, super-talented starlet with an only slightly infuriating trail of number one hits.

Mariah Carey Vs. Ariana Grande SAME AGE Vocal Battle! (UPDATED)www.youtube.com


3. America and Neil Young

If you've heard the band America's number one hit, A Horse With No Name, chances are you might have wondered if you were listening to one of Neil Young's early collaborative efforts. But Young and Dan Peek, the late lead singer of America, share little else than a slightly nasal tenor voice, a penchant for dreamy folk rock, and dozens of harmony-laden albums from the 1970s.

America - A Horse With No Name+Lyricswww.youtube.com


Neil Young - Harvest Moonwww.youtube.com

4. Radiohead and Muse

They're both obsessed with technology, paranoia, apocalypses, and thematically complex concept albums. Ultimately Radiohead's breadth and range of sonic textures far outdoes Muse's, but on some of their better-known songs, Thom Yorke and Matt Bellamy's desperate and wailing voices could easily be mistaken for one another, especially when they're both crying on about fear and loneliness in the digital era over dizzying layers of synthesizer. Plus, it would fit well with both of these bands' brands if they were replicants of each other.

How Much Does Muse Sound Like Radiohead: Analysing Composition, Style, and the Radiohead Zeitgeistwww.youtube.com

5. Fleet Foxes and Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear and Fleet Foxes both have a propensity for multi-layered trippy, ambient folk. Their lead singers have high, delicate voices that sound like they're emanating from a distant cabin, wafting towards you on waves of campfire smoke. There's a whole battalion of folk bands that sound like these two, but as pillars of the genre, the similarities between indie's leading foxes and bears are difficult to ignore.

I'm Losing Myself (Feat. Ed Droste) by Robin Pecknoldwww.youtube.com

6. Fall Out Boy and Panic! at the Disco

Patrick Stump and Brendon Urie both have irrationally massive vocal ranges, which they use to create passionate, angsty, climactic jams that have been giving voice to tween girls' pain for decades. They actually have collaborated several times—even on a Coke ad, which you can listen to in its full glory as each of these singers attempts to out-belt the other. Both bands formed within three years of each other (Fall Out Boy in 2001, Panic! in 2004) and occupied similar cultural spaces in their respective golden years. Fans have even shipped the two lead singers together. Plus their specific vocal styles spawned dozens of shaggy-haired copycat frontmen.

Drunk History: Fall Out Boy featuring Brendon Urie of Panic! At The Discowww.youtube.com

Fall Out Boy Ft Brendon Urie from Panic! at the Disco - Don't Stop Believing coverwww.youtube.com

7. Avril Lavigne Pre and Melissa Vandella

Everybody knows that Avril Lavigne died and was replaced by a clone of herself, created by deft industry people who couldn't resist the potential profits of more Sk8r Bois. Still, the clone does sound and look remarkably similar to her predecessor, despite the obvious differences (Melissa prefers dresses and skirts, while Avril favored pants; and Avril would never have married Chad from Nickelback). Very impressive, music industry executives, but we're onto you.

Conspiracies: Did Avril Lavigne Die in 2003? | Pigeons & Planes Updatewww.youtube.com


Eden Arielle Gordonis a writer and musician from New York. Follow her on Twitter @edenarielmusic.


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