The much anticipated follow-up to 2011's excellent
Degeneration Street,
Times Infinity 1 is the first installment of a planned two-part collection of new music from the Montreal-based indie rock/post-rock unit led by
Murray Lightburn and
Natalia Yanchak. Written and recorded over a two-year span, the ten-track set feels both epic and intimate, hopeful and apocalyptic, which is to say it sounds like a classic
Dears album. Opener "We Lost Everything" is an elliptical three-chord anti-anthem that rolls in like an unstable late-summer storm and leaves a trail of emotional carnage in its wake, but where earlier
Dears outings would double down on the darkness,
Times Infinity isn't set on dwelling only on life's myriad futilities. Ensuing cuts like the lush and unabashedly tender chamber pop ballad "To Hold and Have," the glitch and groove-heavy "Someday All This Will Be Yours," and the electro-Soweto-tinged "I Used to Pray for the Heavens to Fall," the latter of which wouldn't have sounded out of place on fellow Montrealers
Arcade Fire's Reflektor, are flush with secret smiles and wounded hope, which
Lightburn more eloquently describes in a press release as "sentimentality but in the face of great uncertainty; the concept of eternal love and all its fragility." That notion rings the most true on the late-album highlight "Face of Horrors," a knotty baroque pop gem that evokes the sumptuous melancholy of
the Zombies' Odessey and Oracle tempered with the tenacious, hard-truth optimism of
Soft Bulletin-era
Flaming Lips. Fittingly, the record ends with
Yanchak declaring that "in the end one will die alone," but the statement comes off less like a lament and more like a call to arms.
Times Infinity 1 is
the Dears' most emotionally honest set of songs to date; it's the sound of a once dystopia-obsessed band wrestling with the idea that the light at the end of the tunnel might not be a train. ~ James Christopher Monger