Some albums take a while to find their tone, but
Sneaky Thieves have captured their desired atmosphere with the leadoff number "Elegy," a pretty, poignant and pleasing instrumental that conjures up images of
Godspeed You Black Emperor! or
Sigur Rós without the ethereal vocals. This leads somewhat awkwardly into a lighter, thoughtful and focused pop number "With a Smile in a Suit" which is driven by "Freddy Bale" and his earnest warble. The atmosphere is quite important to the songs, whether it is during the close, hushed tone taken during the aptly titled "Quiet" or the rather mundane jazz-tinted "Nothing, Nothing" which is basically nothing to turn one's head. Fortunately that's often the exception as
Sneaky Thieves deliver "Old Tired Joke" with an almost
Radiohead-like precision for very strong results. Just as fulfilling despite being half the length is the melancholic "Across the Field" which seems perfect for rainy Sunday fall evenings. Some efforts in the middle sag, including an interlude that is horrid filler or padding at best. Yet the group wins the listener over again with sparse, inviting jewels such as "The Din" and possibly the lone uplifting or up-tempo number "The Point Is This..." with its winding, heady bridge portion. Only during "Forgotten" does the band seem to fall into the "eerie" or slow-building tension category with its growing use of violins. "Coughing" closes things the same sweet and precious way it began as Freddy Bale is a one-man band. ~ Jason MacNeil