The primary track on Santa Cruz, the seventh full-length album from Seattle’s Pedro the Lion, paraphrases no fewer than 4 separate Bible verses. Extra to the purpose, singer-songwriter David Bazan speaks within the sort of idioms that anybody who’s attended a Wednesday night time youth group or summer time church camp might immediately clock. Bazan repeats the strains, “If I make myself pleasant/Put others’ wants earlier than my very own/Don’t let my coronary heart be hardened,” then ends “It’ll All Work Out” with one load-bearing phrase: “Lord.” If the hymnal lyrics, somber synth notes, and slow-boiling discordance hadn’t absolutely illustrated his cry of prayer, the image is full now.
This has been Bazan’s superpower from the beginning. He speaks to particular experiences with the requisite references, but he doesn’t alienate the uninitiated. The Conflicted Christian, the Struggling Addict, the Anti-Corporatist, the Offended Ex, the Disillusioned American—all complicated viewpoints vividly inhabited throughout Pedro the Lion’s discography. However for the reason that band’s return from a 15-year hiatus in 2019, Bazan has narrowed his framing gadgets. Phoenix triumphantly kicked off a deliberate five-album arc, pairing huge, resonant guitar chords with tales of youth spent within the titular hometown. Three years later, Havasu relaxed its grip on rock theatrics to softly discover the thrills and contradictions of being a lonely, God-fearing seventh grader. With Santa Cruz, Bazan brings the theme of life because the preacher’s child whose household moved round lots into tighter focus.
In simply over a half hour, Santa Cruz spans a decade of Bazan’s life—from eighth grade into his early 20s, and the 4 cities he known as dwelling throughout that point. The songs cowl a formidable quantity of floor in painstaking element, usually inside just some minutes. The title monitor by no means drops its mid-tempo pulse as Bazan breathlessly recounts his embarrassing junior excessive backpack, C.S. Lewis novels, and the way he can’t wait to get married and have intercourse. He’s by no means sounded a lot like Mark Kozelek in his supply, particularly when the glut of stanzas forces him to cram in a line off-rhythm. “Trainer’s Pet” jumps from story to unlucky story whereas fleshing out a bristly ode to teenage rise up and studying via failure. The overtly Beatles-inspired “Little Assist” shares how befriending a child from church and discovering the White Album gave him confidence among the many California seaside city’s surfers and skaters.
Santa Cruz is filled with recollections, musings, and character, like a well-used diary lined in outdated stickers. However the place the lyrics and themes are persistently charming, the music isn’t all the time. Bazan incessantly makes use of synths within the preparations, and their presence in a few of the greatest songs is refreshing: Downcast and dejected, “Don’t Cry Now” revolves round a chunky arpeggio that—considerably extremely—sounds lifted from an outdated Junior Boys single. The bobbing keys and quiet guitar on album standout “Tall Pines,” at first so contained, burst to envelop Bazan’s unflinchingly measured supply like a sudden fog. “Parting,” nevertheless, is about as middling and generic as Pedro the Lion’s indie rock will get—unlucky given its shifting story of a highschool senior whose mother and father transfer as soon as once more, leaving him to complete the 12 months in Seattle. A minimum of when the music is lower than compelling, there’s all the time an affecting story to observe.
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