The sophomore set from New York-based
American Authors doesn't stray too far from their debut
Oh, What a Life, but they make up for the lack of freshness with scope. On
What We Live For, the quartet refine their upbeat, foot-stomping brand of pastoral
Mumford rock and set it on course for the tier occupied by pop/rock chart-toppers like
OneRepublic and
Imagine Dragons. Production and songwriting have also been polished, courtesy of Dirty Canvas label-head duo
Aaron Accetta and
Shep Goodman, resulting in a collection of songs that could all be potential singles. In their bid for arena rock glory,
American Authors come close to delivering the best
OneRepublic album that tourmate
Ryan Tedder never released. The biggest tunes burst down the barn doors as the band -- vocalist/guitarist
Zac Barnett, guitarist/banjo player
James Adam Shelley, drummer
Matt Sanchez, and bassist
Dave Rublin -- deliver in earnest unison. "This Is What We Live For" sets the tone with the first of many singalong choruses, quite similar to Walk the Moon's "Shut Up and Dance" (incidentally, the track was co-written by
Captain Cuts, the trio behind that hit). "Right Here Right Now" -- another
Captain Cuts track -- and "Pocket Full of Gold" are rousing, hand-clapping hoedowns that build on
American Authors' biggest single, "Best Day of My Life." That folk-pop spirit reaches an apex on "Nothing Better," which is essentially the '90s one-hit wonder "Cotton-Eyed Joe" updated for 2016. The major
OneRepublic moments are the standouts: "Counting Stars" lives on in "I'm Born to Run," while the uplifting "Pride" infuses joy and positivity like "Feel Again" or "I Lived." A few breaks are allowed to let you catch your breath, like on the
X Ambassadors slow burn of "Replaced" and the heartfelt "Mess with Your Heart," which features guitar work from
Scott Harris (
Shawn Mendes,
Daya) and Bryan Fryzel (
Misterwives). Whether inspiring singalongs or lighters-up reverie,
American Authors have crafted an easy listen of enjoyable, feel-good anthems custom-made for the main stage. On the penultimate track, "Superman," they even include a killer guitar solo and an
Arcade Fire-sized chorus of "I feel like Superman/I'm making waves/In my heart again." The sentiment flows throughout
What We Live For, a solid pick for fans of passionate, radio-ready, summertime spirit. [
What We Live For was also released on LP.] ~ Neil Z. Yeung