Death Cab For Cutie
Codes and Keys
(Atlantic)
[Rating: 4 stars]
Thereโs two ways to look at Death Cab for Cutie. They are simultaneously the epitome of the little indie-band-that-couldโ Seattle-based with jangly yet melancholic riff-ridden tunes that seeped into various layers of the pop culture strata; and they are also part of the Atlantic Records roster โ a band whoโs last album, Narrow Stairs, debuted at no. 1 on the Billboard 200.
Codes and Keys, their 7th album, is an embodiment of the struggle Death Cab fans face (and what a struggle it is): Itโs definitely not old, familiar, sparse, early/mid โ00s Death Cab, but that doesnโt mean itโs not Death Cab. Underneath slicker production and diminished guitar usage, are the same melodies and introspective, angsty songwriting, only this time the band may come off as occasionally happy.
In March, frontman Ben Gibbard told Rolling Stone โweโre struggling with the idea of home,โ which probably accounts for tunes like โHome is a Fireโ and โYou are a Tourist,โ both of which deal with a displacement or destruction of home (think โGrapevine Fires,” but amplified). Lines like โPlates they will shift, houses will shake, fences will drift. We will awake only to find nothingโs the same,โ lend to a deliberate unease, matched by a new nervous energy that pervades the album.
During the run up to the release of Codes and Keys, much buzz centered around the quotes from the band saying that there would be far less guitar on the album than the previous six. It seemed counter-intuitive for a group whoโs sound is so tied into readily identifiable guitar-riffs like those of โTitle and Registration,โ or more recently, the much chattered about, 9-minute โI Will Possess Your Heart.โ
While die hard fans may feel the group is abandoning something crucial to their musical identity, Codes and Keys still has plenty of guitar to satisfy, and after all, 2005โs Plans was very much piano-heavy. The first few bars of โDoors Open and Unlockedโ should put fears to bed.
Synth and strings do figure more prominently, but in an unobtrusive way. The ornate โSt. Peterโs Cathedralโ could not be without them. โUnobstructed Viewsโ builds in a familiar way for three minutes before Gibbard comes in with โThereโs no wire in the sky, just our love. No unobstructed view, no perfect truth.โ Then thereโs the requisite, bouncy โPortable Television,โ akin to Narrow Stairsโ โYou Can Do Better Than Me.โ โPortable television, take us away from this burden of reflection weโve carried today. The generatorโs running but thereโs nothing on the air, but static is a comfort so we huddle around and stare,โ Gibbard sings.
If one last comparison can be drawn between Narrow Stairs and Codes and Keys, itโs the difference between the two ending tracks: โThe Ice was Getting Thinner,โ a song about a relationship gone stale, and โStay Young Go Dancing.โ Gibbard sings in the latter, โWhen she sings I hear a symphony and Iโm swallowed in sound as it echoes through me. And oh, how I feel alive. Through winterโs advancing, weโll stay young, go dancing.โ
Amid the codes and keys, maybe what Death Cab for Cutie is trying to crack is a smile.

