Soundbite: The Shins

The Shins

“Wincing The Night Away”

Sub Pop Records

More than two years since Natalie Portman insisted that The
Shins would change your life, “Wincing the Night Away,”
the band’s third full-length album, is finally nearing its
long-awaited release date.

What many forget to consider, however, is a little detail of
release dates. “Chutes Too Narrow,” The Shins’
sophomore album, was released prior to “Garden State,”
the film that made the two life-changing songs from the first album
famous, pushing the band to the forefront of indie sub-stardom.

That The Shins’ new material took a backseat for a time
may be why “Wincing the Night Away” is the product of
an unassuming band having some sorting out to do.

The opening song, “Sleeping Lessons,” is an open
canvas erected as one of the album’s memorable bookends,
building slowly off a swaying Zombies feel and flourishing into a
space of pop-laden exuberance. “A Comet Appears” gently
lulls the album to a twangy, twinkling finish, courtesy of a
harmonium.

But that’s no testament to track-by-track cohesion. The
meat of the album is composed of nostalgic Shins numbers arranged
carefully in a blender with songs trying to take on a new
direction.

The result is one which confesses an investment in safety for
the larger part of the record. With songs such as “Split
Needles” and “Girl Sailor” sounding too afraid
for departure (wincing, if you will), a number like “Sea
Legs,” Morrissey timbre and hip-hop beat alike, seems a
shocking arrival.

This doesn’t make the album anything short of charming,
however.

For instance, the band provides a quiet homage to the shorter
songs from albums of old with the spooky minute-long strums and
flutters of “Pam Berry.”

Tracks such as “Turn On Me” (akin to “Gone for
Good” from “Chutes”) and “Red
Rabbits” are catchy, vintage Shins, insistent on
enjoyment.

“Phantom Limb” is the shimmering single of
“Wincing.” It holds the album’s shaky balance
together and introduces front man James Mercer’s more clever
vocal twists, ornamenting the hi-fi production and developed
textures that time afforded the band.

Whether “Garden State”-bred fans are already busy
changing their lives with their umpteenth listen (the album did
leak on the Internet well ahead of 2007), “Wincing the Night
Away” is no magnum opus.

It is at once part struggle with new material and part good
ol’ Shins fun which yields, incidentally, a delicate handful
of beautiful numbers ““ and enough reason for Hollywood to
keep up with their pace this time around.

E-mail Kalenderian at tkalenderian@media.ucla.edu.

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