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Dopamine

Dopamine in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $16.99
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Size: CD
Six years is a long time between albums, so it's not surprising
Third Eye Blind
changed between the release of 2009's
Ursa Major
and 2015's
Dopamine
. The biggest change was the contentious departure of guitarist
Tony Fredianelli
, a mainstay in
TEB
since he replaced founding member
Kevin Cadogan
in 2000, a move that reinforces how
is very much the
Stephan Jenkins
show.
pushes
Jenkins
' emotional bloodletting to the forefront, drawing explicit connections to such early, earnest hits as "Jumper." Much of the album marches to these strident strums with the band choosing to prioritize drama over hooks, providing an appropriate-enough setting for
' cloistered, claustrophobic confessions. That isn't to say
is devoid of pop, though. When the record gets cooking, chorus melodies can soar and riffs can punch, creating an insistent, surging, miniaturized arena rock -- music where the emotions and sound exist on a grand scale but the intent feels intimate. Some of this modesty does indeed derive from how the hooks feel sculpted, not immediate -- the exceptions, "All the Souls" and "Rites of Passage," put the rest of the record in sharp relief -- and that fussiness suggests that
was a bit of a difficult birth, an impression underscored by the explicit call-backs to
's past on the title track. Even if
shows the scars of labor, that in itself is impressive, and it also emphasizes how, nearly 20 years into his career,
prefers to indulge in his idiosyncrasies and not polish them for reasons related to pop. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Third Eye Blind
changed between the release of 2009's
Ursa Major
and 2015's
Dopamine
. The biggest change was the contentious departure of guitarist
Tony Fredianelli
, a mainstay in
TEB
since he replaced founding member
Kevin Cadogan
in 2000, a move that reinforces how
is very much the
Stephan Jenkins
show.
pushes
Jenkins
' emotional bloodletting to the forefront, drawing explicit connections to such early, earnest hits as "Jumper." Much of the album marches to these strident strums with the band choosing to prioritize drama over hooks, providing an appropriate-enough setting for
' cloistered, claustrophobic confessions. That isn't to say
is devoid of pop, though. When the record gets cooking, chorus melodies can soar and riffs can punch, creating an insistent, surging, miniaturized arena rock -- music where the emotions and sound exist on a grand scale but the intent feels intimate. Some of this modesty does indeed derive from how the hooks feel sculpted, not immediate -- the exceptions, "All the Souls" and "Rites of Passage," put the rest of the record in sharp relief -- and that fussiness suggests that
was a bit of a difficult birth, an impression underscored by the explicit call-backs to
's past on the title track. Even if
shows the scars of labor, that in itself is impressive, and it also emphasizes how, nearly 20 years into his career,
prefers to indulge in his idiosyncrasies and not polish them for reasons related to pop. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine