Personality Cult: New Arrows

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…

[Dirtnap Records, Feb. 14]

Album release show: Friday, Feb. 28, 8:30 p.m., Nightlight

Carrboro’sย Personality Cultย walks a fine line between celebration and foreboding. One of the most memorable songs on the pop-punk bandโ€™s 2018 debut was largely built around a single line: โ€œIโ€™m a heart attack/ Waiting to happen.โ€

The track,ย  โ€œHeart Attack,โ€ runs only a minute and a half, but itโ€™s representative of the kind of hooks Ben Carr has mastered with his latest group: compact, catchy, and just a little bit dark.

The bandโ€™s second album,ย New Arrows, which Dirtnap Records released onย February 14, picks up where the self-titled debut left off, but that doesnโ€™t mean nothing has changed. The first record was basically Carr’s solo projectโ€”a new direction after his previous bands,ย Last Yearโ€™s Men and Natural Causes.

But on New Arrows,ย Personality Cult has expanded into a true four-piece, with drummer Colin Sneed (a Durham fixture by way of Mississippiโ€™s Bass Drum of Death), bassist Johnny Valiant, and guitarist Stephen Svacina (formerly of Austin, Texas’sย Missing Pages).

Jeff Burke, ofย label-mates The Marked Men, produced the album, and itโ€™s obviouslyย a good pairing. For 20 years, Dirtnap has been a standard-bearer of a certain strain of punchy, hooky punk; Personality Cult joinsย a lineage that includes The Marked Men, The Exploding Hearts, Radioactivity, and the U.K.โ€™s Martha. Sonically,ย New Arrows isย a step up from the debut: The rhythm section hits harder, and the guitar arrangements are more densely layered.

Pressure is a big theme on New Arrows, introduced on lead single โ€œPressure Pointโ€ and then cleverly echoed on album closer โ€œ5:30.โ€ The 25 minutes of the album are an exercise in escalating tension, with canny sequencing that sends each track sprinting headlong into the next.

Releaseย comes as quick, rhythmic punctuation, such as the oblongย broken-record repetitions that make up the chorus of โ€œPressure Point.” Only well into the last track does the group finally takeย a breath, when the guitars suddenly dropย off forย an extended outro that seems to spiral inย on itself and caps a gripping, blink-and-you’ll-miss-it listen. See for yourself at the album release show at Nightlight on Friday.


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