

Changing Of The Seasons not only presents a more techno-electro vibe overall, but also includes a fourth remix track something that’s starting to become a tradition with Two Door Cinema Club releases.

They provide their original tracks, and follow up by composing badass remixes that should be the highlight of any club, rave or party. That’s what makes their music so diverse. Two Door Cinema Club are also known for remixes, either of their own music or remixes done by the band of other artists work. The band’s other successes include their self-recorded debut EP Four Words To Stand On, and two studio albums under the independent French label Kitsuné. Changing Of The Seasons showcases their individuality’s success as their second EP release. For the most part, however, the band are in thrall to their influences, and some thinking outside the box is needed if they are to create a sound of their own.Coming along to become a household name, Two Door Cinema Club’s electro-indie sound keep them apart from other acts of the massive indie-rock genre. The album has more hooks than you can shake a stick at, and there are some real promising moments here. Two Door Cinema Club would do well to heed his words. ‘You can’t live life being second best’, Trimble sings on closer ‘You’re Not Stubborn’. A bright sound suits songs like the anthemic ‘This Is The Life’ perfectly, but ‘What You Know’ is suffocated by its production. Phillipe Zdar and Eliot James make a great production team on paper, but the results here are sadly quite hit-and-miss. It’s disappointing that what has been one of the band’s best tracks up to now has had the life sucked out of it for its ‘definitive’ version. The promise shown by opening pair ‘Cigarettes In The Theatre’ and ‘Come Back Home’ is cancelled out by the limp ‘Do You Want It All?’. ‘Tourist History’ is bottom heavy, certainly. You wouldn’t think that a thirty-odd minute, ten track album would have them, but then again, three singles in a row ( ‘Something Good Can Work’, ‘I Can Talk’, ‘Undercover Martyn’) is seldom a good idea, no matter how good said singles are. TDCC should aspire to better it in future, because nothing here comes close. Debut single ‘Something Good Can Work’ appears here in re-mixed form, and is about as perfect as indie-pop gets. No half-decent debut should be without them. There are flashes of brilliance here, of course. ( Gibbard’s side-project The Postal Service crop up on the album’s synth driven penultimate track, ‘Eat That Up, It’s Good For You’). There are even shades of Death Cab For Cutie here Trimble sounds like a dead ringer for Ben Gibbard on the album’s lead single, the propulsive ‘I Can Talk’. There is plenty to get excited about here if you are, say, a fan of Bloc Party’s earlier sound, or Franz Ferdinand - even as they are now, in fact: ‘Tourist History’ dabbles in electro-pop, just like certain songs on ‘Tonight’. While looking backwards istead of forwards as regards making music is no bad thing (some would argue that the British ‘guitar indie’ scene needs any kind of spark to get things going again, having seemingly run itself into the ground), TDCC ( Alex Trimble, Kevin Baird, Sam Halliday) wear their influences on their sleeve.


It’s a shame then that the band’s motto seems to be ‘forward to the past’. Having released a string of great singles, not to mention gotten a place on BBC’s highly influential ‘Sound of 2010’ list, the stage is set for the group’s meteoric rise. It’s something that’s quite evident when listening to Northern Irish trio Two Door Cinema Club’s debut album.
