Artist: 
Taking Back Sunday

Tidal Wave: Limited Blue & Yellow Swirl Vinyl 2LP

€37,99

Release date: 16 May, 2025

It's difficult to believe that Tidal Wave is Taking Back Sunday's seventh album; it’s not only the follow-up to 2014's Happiness Is but also marks the first time the group have ever made three consecutive albums with the same lineup & the band brought back producer Mike Sapone & mixer Claudius Mittendorfer, who both worked on Happiness Is.  Tidal Wave also marks the first time that Taking Back Sunday wrote in the studio as they recorded & having that type of fluidity when it came to the songwriting also lent itself to heightened collaboration & creativity throughout the process. “It was really amazing to be able to write in the studio because we could come up with an idea, perform it & then listen back to it immediately instead of feeling boxed in by what we did on demos,” Lazzara explains. “Every song was up for being changed or rewritten when we were in the studio, which was an approach that Adam really encouraged, & nothing was ever set in stone in the sense that if someone had any idea for how to make a song better, we would give it a shot,” Nolan adds. “That approach has potential to be really disastrous, but we were fortunate enough to see everything through & use our collective judgment to take things to the next level.” Nolan specifically cites 'Homecoming' as a song the band constantly kept returning to in order to finally achieve the version that's present on Tidal Wave. 

In many ways the album showcases the strengths of Taking Back Sunday's musical evolution from the blazing opener “Death Wolf” to the orchestrally tinged ballad “Fences” & syncopated anthem “Call Come Running.” However as stated earlier there are also plenty of surprises on Tidal Wave such as the   four-on-the-floor title track which sees them channeling the Clash both sonically & energetically. “I think this idea of making songs that we wrote for ourselves started with Happiness Is & since the reaction to that album was so positive it really encouraged us to take that a step further with this album,” Nolan explains. Furthermore songs like “You Can't Look Back” see Lazzara taking his vocals to stratospheric new levels in order to elevate these songs to a whole other plane of existence. “In the same spirit of being fearless when it came to the music, I tried to lean on the influence of some of my favorite singers on this album,” Lazzara explains. Case in point, during “Holy Water” it seems as if he is digging so deep that the song is the sonic equivalent of a bittersweet punch to the gut. 

Admittedly the process of making Tidal Wave wasn't easy but ultimately the best art doesn't come out of stagnancy & the band couldn't be happier with the final product. “We pushed ourselves so hard that when I listen back to this album now I don't second-guess any of it,” Lazzara explains. “I just sit back & think about how glad I am that we put ourselves through that because without that persistence this record never would have evolved to what it eventually became.” Sure, it may seem ironic that Taking Back Sunday have transcended the emo tag right when the genre is undergoing a resurgence –but if you really think about it, those types of decisions are exactly what have kept the band relevant. “I do so many interviews now where I get asked about the emo revival & I'm like, 'what are you talking about? We never slowed down & we never quit,” he summarizes. “I think this record is going to help us reconnect with our old fans as well as cross paths with some new ones but in the end we wrote it for ourselves sand we couldn't be happier with it.” 

In other words when Lazzara sings, “It's taken me all this time to see... I'm coming home” on the acoustic showstopper “Homecoming” it's not just about geography, it also parallels the next exciting chapter in Taking Back Sunday's career. Welcome back, guys.

Formats: 
Double Vinyl LP
Label: 
Hopeless
Cat#:
HR70481