"When I get there, I'll get there,"
Julian Casablancas sings at one point on
Like All Before You. It's a statement that could apply to the six-year wait for
the Voidz' third full-length, following 2018's
Virtue, but it also captures the album's surprisingly noncommittal feel.
Like All Before You challenges listeners in ways they may not expect -- or want -- from a
Voidz album, trading frenetic invention for a strangely elusive listening experience that starts with its muffled sound. The frustratingly quiet production squanders "All the Same"'s potential as a catchy look inward and manages to flatten the electro drums, acoustic guitar, and cartoonishly sinister singing that would've made "When Will the Time of These Bastards End" a showstopper on
Tyranny or
Virtue. Too often, much of the album's remaining momentum and meaning are snuffed out by
Casablancas' buried vocals. A quarter century after
Is This It, he's still one of rock's most commanding voices; though he may have tired of putting that voice front and center, the scratch-quality vocals on
Like All Before You leave its songs adrift. And while he's tweaked his singing to great effect on work with
the Strokes,
Daft Punk, and
Charli xcx, here his processed warble dulls the impact of songs like the self-aware post-punk-pop of "Square Wave." While a significant chunk of
Like All Before You fails to showcase either
Casablancas' hooky brilliance or
the Voidz' elaborate interplay, there are a few highlights. The album's restraint works in the favor of "Spectral Analysis"'s flirtation with ambient pop, and the band's dedication to a mournful mood wins out on "Perseverance 1C2S." They offer a poppier take on their genre-mashing with "Flexorcist," fusing a brittle synth hook reminiscent of
New Order's "Bizarre Love Triangle" with funk and disco-indebted rhythms and a volcanic guitar solo. Here and on "Prophecy of the Dragon"'s alternately strutting and brooding electro-metal,
the Voidz bring volatile fun back to their music. Putting aside the fact that almost half of these songs appeared over a year before the album's release, the anticlimactic feel of
Like All Before You is striking.
The Voidz always felt completely invested in their music on
Tyranny and
Virtue, while 2019 single "Did My Best" offered a more laid-back style that still gave listeners something to grab onto. Considering that this band began as a vehicle for
Casablancas and company to express their boldest musical ideas and political statements, it's hard to hear
Like All Before You as anything but a disappointing act of self-sabotage. ~ Heather Phares