We know, we know,
Paramore isn't just
Hayley Williams.
Paramore is a band. But when every roiling, addictive album is directly fueled by the discord of yet another lineup change, you start to wonder: Should the hole left by the most recently departing bandmate be considered an official member of the band?
It's a thought you can't help but mull over listening to
Paramore's crackling fifth full-length album, 2017's
After Laughter. The lineup this time features
Williams, guitarist
Taylor York (a member since their 2007 sophomore effort
Riot!) and original drummer
Zac Farro, returning after an estrangement since 2010. Notably not present here is bassist
Jeremy Davis, who left for the second time in a huff of legal disturbances in 2015. The first time
Davis left was immediately preceding the band's 2006 debut,
All We Know Is Falling -- an album ultimately devoted to the struggle and strife of his departure (though he ultimately rejoined for
Riot!).
Paramore also famously came close to disbanding after
Riot!'s breakthrough success, with
Farro and his brother, guitarist
Josh Farro, disliking, apparently, the intense focus on
Williams. That conflict directly informed 2010's
Brand New Eyes, with the
Farro brothers leaving in a dust cloud of public smack-talk afterward. The sturm und drang of the
Farros departure became the theme of the band's massively successful 2013 eponymous album, which found
Williams,
Davis, and
York playing as a trio. But
Davis eventually became unhappy with that record's royalty split and left the group to sue them. Which brings us to the "Never Say Die" theme of
After Laughter, an album that proves one thing above all else:
Paramore thrive amid conflict.
Again working with producer
Justin Meldal-Johnsen,
Paramore churn out anthem after infectious anthem, each euphorically designed to grab you where it counts -- melodically and emotionally. Where 2013's
Paramore found the group tentatively transitioning from their pop-punk roots toward a multi-layered '80s synth-pop sound,
After Laughter reveals them having beautifully completed the transformation. Much credit here goes to
York, who co-wrote all of the songs and whose deft guitar and keyboard make up much of the album's distinct aural character. But of course,
Williams still beats at the center of everything, her voice providing the album's warm, exuberant core. Tracks like the lead-off disco-tinged "Hard Times" and crisply attenuated "Told You So" are earworms rife with DayGlo marimba and icy adult-contempo synths. Elsewhere,
Williams weaves in the arpeggiated warmth of
the Cure's "Friday I'm in Love," on "Grudges," and evinces
Diva-era
Annie Lennox on "Forgiveness.”
Despite the album's buoyantly pastel new wave tones, it unsurprisingly contains a truckload of hard-won maturity and a growing sense of battle fatigue. You hear it on virtually every track, particularly on the yearning closer "Tell Me How" ("I'm getting sick of the beginnings"). Ultimately, each
Paramore album thus far has been more or less another triumphant battle cry of a band having fought and survived a breakup. But
After Laughter intersects this with transcendence: the realization that life is an ongoing series of new beginnings. ~ Matt Collar