During the time between
Neon Trees' 2012 album
Picture Show and
Pop Psychology, frontman
Tyler Glenn went through some big changes, including seeking therapy and coming out as a gay man. It's not surprising, then, that the band's third album is also its most confessional, but
Glenn and company still manage to have fun with their emotional crises. The album's song titles read like advice column headlines, and the name
Pop Psychology itself is a clever and accurate manifesto: for
Neon Trees, the therapeutic value of dancing on your troubles to the perfect pop song always comes first, even when
Glenn is pouring his heart out. Fortunately, there's nothing boring about the inevitability of the verse-chorus-verse format when it's as satisfying as
Pop Psychology is at its best. "Love in the 21st Century" kicks off the album with the kind of unabashedly catchy fare fans expect, with
Glenn sounding equal parts bold and uncertain as he sings about "broken heart technology" over fizzy synths and handclaps. While
Neon Trees have gradually tightened up their pop formula since
Habits, their first hit, "Animal," still remains the template for a lot of their music. It makes sense that they reunited with
Habits producer Tim Pagnotta, who helps them double down on their new wave and synth pop obsessions and play to their strengths:
Glenn's brash yet sensitive vocals and their undeniable way with hooks. Lead single "Sleeping with a Friend"'s breezy synths add '80s soft rock leanings that also pop up on "Foolish Behavior" and the standout "Living in Another World"; while it's not exactly the most expected direction for the band, it conveys the album's sleekness and vulnerability well. There's a similar tension in
Pop Psychology's lyrics, which cram in plenty of detail ("Unavoidable" compares a bad relationship to mixed feelings about L.A.; "Voices in the Halls" name-checks
Heaven or Las Vegas) while still seeming universal. Knowing
Glenn's background gives an extra sting to "Teenager in Love" when he sings "I'm a fool with a curse and a crush," yet "Text Me in the Morning"'s boy-girl shenanigans are just as vivid. Even if
Neon Trees sometimes try a little too hard to be serious on
Pop Psychology, it's some of their most heartfelt music and some of their finest. ~ Heather Phares