The HOLD STEADY – ” The Price Of Progress ” Best Albums Of 2023

Posted: July 1, 2023 in MUSIC

The album arrives as The Hold Steady mark the 20th anniversary of their foundation bringing new ideas, sounds, and textures to a still-evolving canon of nine studio album releases that began with 2004’s ‘Almost Killed Me’.

The ninth album from the Hold Steady, according to Craig Finn, features “some of the most cinematic songs” in their discography. Bonny Light Horseman’s Josh Kaufman is the producer of the new record, which arrives in time for the band’s 20th anniversary.

“The Price of Progress” is The Hold Steady’s most musically adventurous collection of songs so far, pairing singer Craig Finn’s vivid storytelling with arrangements that go in some unexpected directions. That’s not to say that Tad Kubler has forsaken guitar riffs: the lead single, “Sideways Skull,” is full of guitars that thrum like a glasspack muffler at a stoplight, while opening track “Grand Junction” unfolds over a loping, guttural guitar line, with punctuation from horns.

Elsewhere, though, things are pretty different—two songs even feature congas, a first for the band. Perhaps the biggest departure is “Understudies,” which offers a call-and-response between Kubler’s guitar and Franz Nicolay’s piano near the beginning before sashaying along on a beat rooted in disco, the same way that Pink Floyd’s “Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2,” has a disco edge.

“The Price of Progress” pushes its thunderous brand of punk, blues, and rock further than ever. It pays off with irresistible curveballs like “Understudies,” a song about showbiz with a funky, “Miss You”-style groove by guitar heroes Steve Selvidge and Tad Kubler. It all rolls straight into the sky on the undulant “Distortions of Faith,” about a pop star who takes a paid gig in a dictatorship and tries not to think too hard about it on the flight back. Indeed, no one writes like Craig Finn.

The riddles of faith and fragility that permeate classic early albums like “Separation Sunday” and “Boys and Girls in America” have metastasized into middle-aged malaise, where the passage of time hovers like a cruel joke. Finn fixates on people engaged in “facsimiles of fun”: married life (“Perdido”), Adderall-fueled hookups (“Sixers”), and adult softball leagues (“Carlos Is Crying”). “New medication for the same old depression,” as he puts it on “Sideways Skull.” It’s the one song here where Finn’s characters find joy, or something close to it. As the pyro-rocker protagonist laments, “It’s hard to fully rock in a halfway house.”

Finn’s lyrics are as evocative as ever, and though the characters in these songs have problems, they aren’t all as desperate or druggy as some of the ne’er-do-wells on previous Hold Steady albums. That he keeps finding new ways to sing thoughtfully about people facing challenges is a testament to his skill as a storyteller, and to his empathy as a narrator. The fact that Finn fronts a group of musicians who are as keen as he is to rethink and refine what they do seems almost too good to be true, and yet each album reaches a little further than the one before. “The Price of Progress” is progress indeed.

The new album “Price of Progress” came out March 31st, 2023

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