Swedish new wave revivalists
the Sounds have always evinced a passion for '80s club-ready dance-rock, but on the band's 2011 studio album
Something to Die For, dancing to hot beats is clearly the rallying cry. In fact, the band opens the album with the pulsing and atmospheric one-two punch of the dancefloor call-to-arms cut "It's So Easy" and the equally as urgent "Dance with the Devil." The tracks are late-night house and disco-inflected anthems that find vocalist
Maja Ivarsson lustfully crooning, "Together we conquer our planet with DANCE!" Given that
the Sounds seemed to perfect the
Blondie meets
the Cars new wave rock sound on their brilliant 2006 effort
Dying to Say This to You and similarly attractive 2008 effort
Crossing the Rubicon, it’s refreshing to hear them branch out into an even more synth and electronic-based sound here. Which isn’t to say they have completely forsaken their guitar rock roots, as such cuts as the driving "The No No Song" and the romantically epic late album track "Won't Let Them Tear Us Apart" are superb
U2 meets
the Killers-style dance-rock anthems. Elsewhere,
the Sounds keep the dance cuts coming with the Euro-disco-inspired "Better Off Dead" and the funky
Roxette meets
the Arctic Monkeys-sounding "Yeah Yeah Yeah." Ultimately, by pushing the dance beats and the slabs of synth to the foreground,
the Sounds have increased their pop appeal and delivered an album that pleases your ears while also demanding that you leave your blood on the dancefloor. ~ Matt Collar