Review: The National rides its familiar sound to new heights | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Review: The National rides its familiar sound to new heights

FILE- In this March 25, 2014, file photo, from left, Bryce Dessner, Matt Berninger, Bryan Devendorf, Scott Devendorf, and Aaron Dessner of The National band arrive at the LA Special Screening of "Mistaken For Strangers" at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. With “Sleep Well Beast,” the band’s seventh studio album and first in four years, The National revives the distinctive vibe that led it to the forefront of 21st century arena rock bands. Familiar or not, these guys are good at what they do. (Photo by Annie I. Bang /Invision/AP, File)

The National, "Sleep Well Beast" (4AD)

The world's best rock bands are built on unique blends of talent and sound that set them apart from all of the others who strap on guitars and blister fingers in basements. And few bands have soared higher or set themselves apart more distinctively than The National, which exploded out of Cincinnati nearly two decades ago.

With "Sleep Well Beast," the band's seventh studio album and first in four years, The National revives the distinctive vibe that led it to the forefront of 21st century arena rock bands. Familiar or not, these guys are good at what they do.

Pulsating bass and drums set a forward-leaning foundation for the band's polished guitar-keyboard mix. Together they convey urgency, transporting listeners through mostly dark lyrics past a sonic backdrop that offers hope mainly because it's on its way somewhere. This happens on the mellow opener, "Nobody Else Will Be There," and on the rollicking single, "The System Only Dreams in Total Darkness."

What takes the band higher, ultimately, is Matt Berninger's charisma. Not since Bryan Ferry's heyday has a singer seemed to have stepped so vividly from the pages of a Raymond Chandler story.

The heartache is palpable. So is the tragic hero's cool remove.

Time will tell if The National belongs among rock's legends. Some bands with this much attitude lose lustre when the charm wears off. But there'll be time to sort that out — and the true believers won't be disappointed in the meantime.

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