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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Death Cab’s Gibbard bares self in latest

Upbeat, lively feel carries emotional weight on ‘Kintsugi’

Mikael Wood Los Angeles Times

Ben Gibbard never thought he’d find himself where he did at the end of 2012.

The boyish frontman of Seattle’s Death Cab for Cutie had spent the previous decade and a half establishing a reputation as one of the most sensitive – and hardest-working – figures in American indie rock. The band’s music, moody but pretty, won devoted fans for its proud sense of vulnerability, and when Death Cab hit it big with 2005’s million-selling “Plans,” the group’s long-building success made it a hero to messy-haired misfits everywhere.

By 2009, Gibbard’s world had expanded to the point that he’d married actress-singer Zooey Deschanel and moved to Los Angeles, a city he’d famously blasted in an early Death Cab tune called “Why You’d Want to Live Here.” (Sample lyric: “You can’t swim in a town this shallow.”) Three years later, though, the two were divorced, with Gibbard packing his things into the back of his Prius for a return trip up Interstate 5.

“I was like, ‘Jesus Christ, man – did I just become the most stereotypical rock ’n’ roller ever?’ “ he recalled recently.

True to form, Gibbard, 38, explores the nuances of that easily caricatured experience on Death Cab for Cutie’s new album, “Kintsugi,” released Tuesday. The band’s first record since 2011’s somewhat glazed-over “Codes and Keys,” it opens with “No Room in Frame,” in which the singer asks an unnamed ex, “Was I in your way when the cameras turned to face you?” Other songs mention an ingenue battling the passage of time and “a dumpster in the driveway of all the plans that came undone.”

Yet Gibbard’s divorce isn’t the only breakup reflected in “Kintsugi,” whose title refers to an ancient Japanese technique for repairing broken pottery. The album also follows the departure late last year of guitarist Chris Walla, who formed Death Cab with Gibbard in 1997 and produced each of the group’s previous seven albums. He plays on this one, but for the first time the band utilized an outside producer in Rich Costey, who expanded Death Cab’s sound with spacey synth textures and crisply propulsive beats. The result is a paradox: an account of emotional devastation that feels livelier than anything the band has done in ages.

“With the last couple records, I think I learned the hard way that minimalism and detachment are not things that people want from me,” Gibbard said with a laugh. “What people are attracted to about the music I make is the engagement and the detail.”

Not that he wasn’t aware of the risks in writing about such a public episode. Gibbard remembered visiting his friend Jenny Lewis, the celebrated singer-songwriter, and playing her early versions of some of the tunes on “Kintsugi.” Concerned that listeners might infer things about Deschanel, he asked Lewis whether he should make some lines more obscure.

“She told me, ‘Don’t change how you go about your business for fear of somebody correctly or incorrectly placing a face on these songs,’ ” Gibbard said. “ ‘Go right into it.’ And I think I did.”

Still, he was quick to add, the singer tried to approach the topic “empathetically”; he wasn’t interested in creating “a tell-all or a kiss-off or anything like that.”

He’s right about that: In keeping with indie-rock tradition, the aggression on “Kintsugi” is mostly of the passive variety. But if Gibbard limits the identifying details when it comes to people, he’s more specific about places. Culver City, Beverly Drive, “the cliffs of the Palisades” – each serves as a clearly defined setting on an album that looks beyond Gibbard’s divorce to ponder the larger systems of power and privilege at work in L.A.

“You’ll never have to hear the word ‘no’ if you keep all your friends on the payroll,” he sings in “Good Help (Is So Hard to Find),” a song he insisted was based not on one particular person but on a number of people he met while living here.

“And in a way it’s not even their fault that they have this worldview,” he said. “If you were raised in the public eye or amongst people in this industry, your grip on reality outside the echo chamber is virtually nonexistent.”

None of this is the kind of stuff Gibbard expected he’d one day write songs about. Indeed, it was partly “Kintsugi’s” rarefied subject matter that led Walla to leave the band, according to the singer, who recalled an early studio session at which Walla complained that he couldn’t relate to the lyrics. Eventually the guitarist announced that he didn’t think he should produce the album.

“He kept referring to how dark the songs were,” Gibbard said. “But in my opinion, it doesn’t matter if the guitar player can relate to the lyrics in a song. What’s important is that the song works.”