In the middle of July 2023 in a Los Angeles studio, Deep Sea Diver mastermind Jessica Dobsontook a guitar solo but somehow felt nothing. Just days earlier, her Seattle band played a series ofsemi-secret shows for devotees at a hometown bar, de facto rehearsals for cutting a new record.The sets had gone well, but, almost immediately, the sessions didn’t. The songs’ essence seemedmuddled, Dobson’s conviction lost somewhere in the 1,000 miles between Southern Californiaand the home studio she shares with partner, drummer, and frequent co-writer Peter Mansen. Onthat first night in Los Angeles, she broke down, wondering what she was doing there, what herband could do to fix it...
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In the middle of July 2023 in a Los Angeles studio, Deep Sea Diver mastermind Jessica Dobsontook a guitar solo but somehow felt nothing. Just days earlier, her Seattle band played a series ofsemi-secret shows for devotees at a hometown bar, de facto rehearsals for cutting a new record.The sets had gone well, but, almost immediately, the sessions didn’t. The songs’ essence seemedmuddled, Dobson’s conviction lost somewhere in the 1,000 miles between Southern Californiaand the home studio she shares with partner, drummer, and frequent co-writer Peter Mansen. Onthat first night in Los Angeles, she broke down, wondering what she was doing there, what herband could do to fix it. For the first time ever, Deep Sea Diver retreated, heading home withoutan album. Did they need to scrap it all, to begin again with new material?Not at all: Following a brief break, Dobson found a renewed sense of self, a trust in her visionfor her band and songs and her ability to capture them. After that Los Angeles hiccup, longtimecollaborator Andy Park asked Dobson how the new stuff was going over an early fall dinner. Sheadmitted she needed help. In that humbling confession, she soon found ways of working thathelped her reimagine and reinvigorate Deep Sea Diver and led directly to the power andbrilliance of Billboard Heart, Deep Sea Diver’s fourth album and first for Sub Pop. It is a coup, atriumph over self-doubt in which what first felt like failure became an opportunity to find newfreedom, belief, and strength. You can hear it in each of these 11 songs, the beating heart thatmakes everything here feel like a new anthem for finding your own way forward.The cocksure Bad Seeds swagger of “Shovel,” the tender mercies of “Loose Change,” theserpentine machinations of “Let Me Go,” where Dobson tangles with fellow guitar dynamoMadison Cunningham: Billboard Heart immediately puts Deep Sea Diver in the company of St.Vincent, TV on the Radio, and Flock of Dimes, bands that have found newly ornate andmagnetic ways to make indie rock by discarding notions of how it must sound or what it mustsay. Dobson punches through her past here. As she howls during Billboard Heart’s rapturous titletrack, she is “welcoming the future by letting go of it.”Exactly three years before Dobson’s galvanizing dinner with Park, Deep Sea Diver issued itsthird album, 2020’s Impossible Weight, via ATO, the colossal indie imprint that has helped MyMorning Jacket, Alabama Shakes, and King Gizzard build careers across the last quarter-century.It was a significant step up for a band that had self-released its first two LPs. The surge ofresources resulted in a groundswell of exposure, even a spot on Billboard charts.That success, though, caused Dobson to doubt her impulses, to begin thinking about what anidea’s impact or reception might be as much the strength of the idea itself. During this period ofsecond-guessing, she and Mansen sat near the wide windows of their Seattle living room, withher on piano as he hammered a guitar nearby. “See in the Dark”—a song about coveting yourown notions, despite the occasional sense they’re slipping away—emerged in that single sitting,its gothic elegance and pop grandeur proffering a blueprint for what else could come.That moment of domestic creation proved essential for several reasons. Before ImpossibleWeight, Dobson and Mansen wrote many of Deep Sea Diver’s songs together; this was a returnto that bond, which carried over to more than half of Billboard Heart. What’s more, the pairbegan recording more at home, too. They borrowed microphones and a small clutch of essentialgear to capture guitars and vocals in their basement. When talks later began in earnest with Parkfollowing the Los Angeles debacle, Dobson began revisiting those earlier recordings, realizingthat she had captured so much of that ineffable spark at home, where the atmosphere was of herown design. Mansen and Park helped convince her these weren’t just good enough to use butriveting in their realness. These early versions became templates and blueprints to build upon andframe, plus a way for Dobson to believe again in the material and, most important, herself.And from end to end, the material on Billboard Heart is astonishing. The title track is the onesong Deep Sea Diver actually finished in Los Angeles. It’s a radiant and magnificent thing, thebillowing synths of member Elliot Jackson and tunneling pedal steel of guest Greg Leisz pushingup an anthem for fearlessly advancing into the future, as best you can. “Emergency” linkshardcore’s famous vim to electroclash’s instant allure, Dobson’s italicized voice racing like agust of wind. Her brief guitar solo at the end is an all-timer, a few hiccupping notes suddenlymoving like a sports car in terrifyingly tight corners. Tender and vulnerable, “Tiny Threads” is asweeping anthem for anyone trying to hold anything together—life, love, themselves. “If ithaunts me, let it haunt me,” Dobson sings softly over a stillness framed only by bass and noise.She lets her guitar careen into feedback, then steadily sculpts it into something tuneful. It’s alifetime of anxiety and sublimation, crystallized into 10 seconds. Billboard Heart feels that wayat large.For a minute there, Dobson let that mix of art and commerce we call the music industry cloudher judgment and interfere with her impulses, a common enough story for anyone whose decadesof work suddenly yield success. She found her way out of that wormhole by embracing newness,whether that meant practicing songwriting as if it were collegiate homework, believing in herskills recording at home, or playing bass herself because the band had blown so much moneyduring those aborted Los Angeles sessions. (N.B. The big but elastic bass lines are a consistenthighlight here, so: good choice.)Mostly, she let go of the fear that comes when we think about our jobs, no matter what they are,and remembered that making music is less work than a way of reckoning and playing with theworld, of healing and finding other ways forward. Billboard Heart emerged when Dobsontrusted her instincts, a personal breakthrough that prompted an artistic one. It is, in turn, the bestDeep Sea Diver album yet, a defiant and brilliant exclamation mark at the end of a long period ofwandering.WWW.DEEPSEADIVER.COM
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