Music

[Brit-Pop]

Snow Patrol

A Hundred Million Suns

Image

For an album with such a high-wattage title, the follow-up to the multiplatinum-selling Eyes Open comes off a little dim. It’s massive, certainly, and even moderately gassy, but despite generally upbeat lyrics, Suns fails to generate any significant artistic heat.

More

Snow Patrol
Two stars
Beyond the Weekly
Snow Patrol
Billboard.com: Snow Patrol

Preferring to stick with tried-and-true songwriting formulas (“sensitive” + “deep” = a slew of soundtrack appearances), Gary Lightbody & Co.’s latest operates in exactly two modes: radio-ready anthem and earnest ballad. Catchy choruses and dense arrangements pervade, yet without a little more variety to break up the prevalent interplanetary references, each subsequent display of alt-rock guitar runs becomes less distinguishable than the last. As a whole, Suns borders on being too epic in scope, and with the exception of the comparatively harder, defiant “Take Back the City” and sickly sweet piano swooner “Crack the Shutters,” there’s not much territory that forerunners Coldplay haven’t previously mined. Even 16-minute, three-movement closer “The Lightning Strike” ultimately blends into the unfocused, mid-tempo blur.

On second thought, “The Golden Floor,” a hushed and haunted shadow of a song somehow reminiscent of Elliott Smith, is a blip of brilliance that’s nearly overpowered by the colliding bodies surrounding it. But by the time it registers as a bright spot, things have imploded inward, taking any shimmer of hope for truly bigger things with them.

Share

Julie Seabaugh

Get more Julie Seabaugh

Previous Discussion:

  • Kurian sees his music as a driving force, a rallying cry for Gen Z to be “doers rather than spectators in this world.”

  • Pass the Mic hits Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood for several concert dates this month featuring Ja Rule, Fat Joe, Slick Rick, Doug E. Fresh ...

  • The ’90s lent itself to beautiful, Black, impenetrably strong girl groups who dominated R&B for the best part of the decade. At Planet Hollywood on ...

  • Get More Music Stories
Top of Story