7/10
On their fourth studio album 'Thunderbird Lodge', US outfit The Flavor That Kills continue to refine their increasingly expansive mix of rock, psychedelia and synth-driven experimentation. It is an album built around atmosphere as much as songcraft, one that leans into uncertainty and fractured storytelling without losing sight of melody or momentum.
The Madison-based group approach the album with a looseness that gives the material its distinct character. Throughout, many of the songs unfold with the unpredictability of ideas captured in motion. There is this restless energy running throughout the record, as though the band are discovering the shape of each track while simultaneously pulling it apart.
Conceptually, 'Thunderbird Lodge' follows a surreal science-fiction narrative involving artificial intelligence, layered realities and erased identities, but the record never becomes weighed down by its own mythology. Synthesisers drift through thick guitar arrangements, rhythms pulse underneath waves of distortion, and vocals often feel suspended somewhere between confession and transmission.
Musically, the album balances several contrasting instincts at once. There are moments that carry the swagger of garage-rock, flashes of sharp-edged punk attitude and stretches of hazy psychedelic atmosphere that feel indebted to experimental alternative music of the late twentieth century. Yet despite the shifting influences, the band maintain a coherent identity rooted in tension, repetition and emotional unease.
Part of what makes Thunderbird Lodge effective is its refusal to over-explain itself. The record trusts atmosphere to carry much of the emotional weight, leaving us to navigate the spaces between narrative fragments and detours on their own terms.
'Thunderbird Lodge' may not offer easy entry points, but that feels entirely deliberate. It is a record more interested in immersion than clarity, drawing us into a strange and shifting world that becomes more absorbing the longer you stay inside it.