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Young Antiques See, Show Continual Growth on “I Think You’ll Never”

Like a Deep South cross between Tom Petty and Elvis Costello, Atlanta power pop trio Young Antiques have always been one of those bands who manage to write mature, impeccably intricate rock songs without ever making them sound overthought. Fans have been starved for more material as the band has been on hiatus, but that is about to change when the band release their new single, โ€œI Think Youโ€™ll Never.โ€ The song is taken from Another Risk of the Heart, their first album in a decade, which is set for release on June 5.

โ€œI Think Youโ€™ll Neverโ€ is a love song – but itโ€™s different from most, in that lyrics tell a story of a relationship where ending is purposefully left ambiguous: itโ€™s unclear whether or not the couple will work it out or not. Itโ€™s a much more realistic look at love, which is rarely as simple as most songs would have us believe. Musically, itโ€™s an intricate yet energetic slice of classic jangle rock, and the latest example of the astute songwriting that has made Young Antiques a cult favorite with fans since their album Wardrobe for a Jet Weekend set them apart from their peers two decades ago.

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Frontman and principal songwriter Blake Rainey says itโ€™s no accident that โ€œI Think Youโ€™ll Neverโ€ makes Young Antiques sound like they are reemerging at the peak of their songwriting powers. โ€œ[Itโ€™s] a song that we couldnโ€™t have written on the first go-around,โ€ he says, adding that lyrically, it โ€œplays to the fears, complexities and pitfalls of long relationships. Itโ€™s about those times where you donโ€™t have confidence that the person youโ€™re investing in, the person youโ€™re spending your entire life with, is really there, really connecting. There are themes of giving up, and a feeling of knowing a person really, really well, and realizing that theyโ€™re maybe not what you had hoped, and that the life you started with them wasnโ€™t what youโ€™d dreamed of.โ€

Another Risk of the Heart is, overall, also about love – but again, not in the usual terms. Instead, Rainey says, this album โ€œis a love letter to the band, and to the act of trying to make the best music of your life – years after that halo of your 20s, after the point most people figure rock and roll bands typically โ€˜peak.โ€™โ€

Young Antiques certainly arenโ€™t alone in this refusal to allow any kind of age limit to impede their work.

โ€œRight now, Nick Cave and Dinosaur Jr. are out there making the best music of their lives. Theyโ€™re just going with it, and while they have a leg up financially, theyโ€™re still making amazing music,โ€ Rainey says. โ€œBut more importantly, theyโ€™re making it ok for under-the-radar artists who have been around to keep going. To keep making better and better music, damn the odds. The way I feel about reuniting with this lineup and putting new music out? This is just what we do. And what we’ll keep doing. End of story.โ€