Neon Trees' debut,
Habits, was only eight songs long, almost more of an EP than a true album, yet they made the most of it, taking their
Strokes-meets-
Killers pop in a far more mainstream direction than either of those influences with the joyfully hedonistic hit "Animal." Two years later,
Picture Show proves that the band's flair for writing almost aggravatingly catchy songs is as strong as ever, particularly on the "Animal"-esque bounce of "Everybody Talks," the guitar-heavy version of the 2011 hit they had with
Kaskade, "Lessons in Love (All Day, All Night)," and the frothy album closer "I Am the DJ." Along with
the Killers' side project
Big Talk,
Neon Trees bring back a true pop/rock sound that's bright, shiny, undeniably kinetic but not necessarily aimed at the dance floor.
Picture Show not only reflects the increasing divide between pop and rock in the years since the '80s, it reveals that
Neon Trees don't want to just bridge that gap -- they want to stand on either side of it, too. They stretch in several directions without being suicidally challenging, most successfully on "Teenage Sounds," where they downplay their new wave tendencies for some passably snarling and surly rock, and on "Mad Love," a twangy power-pop homage featuring a duet between
Tyler Glenn and
Elaine Bradley.
Neon Trees usually stay on the right side of the fine line between catchy and annoying, and though they're better at breadth than at depth, they're good at what they do. ~ Heather Phares