
Cage the Elephant
Social Cues
(RCA)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Itโs not entirely correct to say that Nashvilleโs (by way of Bowling Green, Kentucky and London) Cage the Elephant has radically refashioned itself on this, the quintetโs fifth studio album. But the bandโs first release of original material since 2015โs Dan Auerbach produced Tell Me Iโm Pretty delivers their sound from a slightly different angle.
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Certainly the dissolution of frontman and primary songwriter Matt Schultzโs longtime relationship injects a melancholy, introspective quality to this material that established fans might not be prepared for. While the elements of garage, punk and indie rock remain, production by John Hill pushes the vibe to an โ80s alternative approach. Those hearing the title track might even think itโs a lost Cars B-side. Thereโs still plenty of harder-edged guitar, but ballads like โBlack Madonna,โ the clichรฉd title of โLoveโs The Only Wayโ and the appropriately named closing โGoodbyeโ are enhanced by an orchestra. Elsewhere, overdubbed strings on โWhat Iโm Becomingโ both soften the sting and enhance the dark, reflective lyrics of โIโm so sorry, honey/ for what Iโm becoming.โ
The โ80s atmospherics are strong on the Psychedelic Fursโ-influenced โTokyo Smokeโ that uses violin, viola, cello (all credited to Matt Combs) and squiggly synths to bolster angry lyrics โI played the fool โtil I started to choke โฆ I played the fool again/ My old unfaithful friend.โ A guest vocal appearance from Beck further emphasizes the portentous โ80s feel on the dub reggae-styled โNight Runningโ with a hypnotic melody bubbling under oblique concepts like โI got the Gris Gris love/ And the streets in my blood.โ And there are few better choices for a catchy summer single than โReady To Let Go,โ with its chorus begging for entire auditoriums to sing along, even if the words of โWas I fooling myself/ Iโm gonna spread these ashes/ Never had control/ Iโm ready โฆ to let goโ arenโt exactly sunshine and unicorns.ย ย ย
It may not be what those who watched Cage the Elephantโs brain-frying CD/DVD Live from the Vic in Chicago blowout concert expect. But these songs ride on hooky, memorable choruses and a tamped-down yet edgy intensity thatโs just as riveting, if not quite as over-the-top rocking. Social Cuesshows the group maturing musically without losing its grip on their ability to craft haunting, accessible tunes ready for the larger venues they have rightfully graduated to.
