With only a few hints left of their artsy shoegazer-inspired past,
Secrets Are Sinister sees
Longwave continuing in the
U2 by way of
Snow Patrol vein of 2005's
There's a Fire and aiming directly for radio acceptance, this time without major label backing. This seeming grab for commercial acceptance may be paying off, as "The Devil and the Liar"'s shimmering instrumental opening soundtracks a Lubriderm commercial. Musically, the song is a dead ringer for their peers
Rogue Wave and likewise owes quite a debt to
Death Cab for Cutie. It's good that there are frequent tonal shifts between tracks, between moody rockers and melancholic ballads, but the influences on display are obvious, particularly when the results feel like above-average knockoffs of
Gary Lightbody's
Snow Patrol juggernaut.
Secrets Are Sinister is well crafted, and producer
Peter Katis does provide some great dynamics. There's also occasional emotional pull when vocalist
Steve Schiltz -- who seems to be doing his best hybridization of
Interpol's
Paul Banks and
James Mercer of
the Shins -- goes falsetto and
Katis buries that falsetto in a wall of sound, as on "Life Is Wrong," which could easily soundtrack one of the coming-attraction commercials on HBO or Showtime or a scene in a CW show. The title track is a nice, slow affair, and a lot of studio work obviously went into the dynamics of the album, although
Secrets Are Sinister would be improved if the songs were more memorable.
–
Tim DiGravina, Rovi