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Old 08-26-2020, 06:53 PM
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lots and lots of Imploding The Mirage reviews all over the place these days, many mentioning collaborations and lauding Lindsey's guitar solo.

https://www.theday.com/article/20200825/ENT10/200829662
Review: The Killers return with songs of women and loyalty
The Killers, “Imploding the Mirage” (Island Records)

Published August 25. 2020 7:13AM
By MARK KENNEDY, Associated Press


When you are The Killers and your usual guitarist has gone, no problem. When you’re The Killers, you can turn to Lindsey Buckingham.

The former Fleetwood Mac guitarist steps in for a tune on the new 10-song “Imploding the Mirage,” another sign of the band’s clout.
The album's guests also include k.d. lang and Adam Granduciel of The War on Drugs.

The absence of guitarist and co-founder Dave Keuning is felt, with keyboards and drums stepping into the void. Without Keuning’s jangle and riff shards, The Killers have a more poppy sound.

If 2017′s “Wonderful Wonderful” was a meditation on the anxiety of masculinity, the new album often explores the lives of women, with two sharp portraits of tough survivors in “Blowback” and “Caution” — women whom Brandon Flowers sings each come from “white trash.”

Many other songs are about loyally backing a partner. "I’ll be there when water’s rising/I’ll be your lifeguard," Flowers sings on “Dying Breed.” On “When the Dreams Run Dry,” he vows: “I’ll be on your side/When the dreams run dry." In “Lightening Fields," he sings, ”Just wanted to run my fastest/And stand beside you." The cover of the album depicts a god tenderly supporting a goddess.

Jonathan Rado of California psychedelic-rock duo Foxygen and Shawn Everett — who worked on “Wonderful Wonderful” as well as with Kacey Musgraves and Alabama Shakes — have stepped in to produce, and their influence can best be heard on the funky “Fire in Bone.”

Elsewhere, listeners may have fun finding the band's other influences. There's a Tom Petty-ish sound to “Blowback,” and “My Own Soul's Warning” has a Springsteen vibe. But there's no mistaking that classic Killers mix of soaring vocals, sonic bombast and sly humor in such songs as “My God” and the title track. It's a solid album from a band still exploring.
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"kind of weird: a tribute to the dearly departed from a band that can treat its living like trash"
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