
Songs In The Key Of Yikes (Vinyl)
âNo Hopeâ is similarly resilient, McCaughanâs lyrics painting a crushing scene before entering its titular refrain. He repeats the phrase nine times, pauses a beat, and transforms its sentiment entirely, breaking the chant with the line âand here we are singing.â The lyric is sharp, at once a simple observation and a profound statement of being, the songâs crushing nights and endless days no less so on its account, but McCaughanâs voice finds a certain sweetness in having endured, and continuing to do so.
Paradoxically, the energy of Songs in the Key of Yikes borders on and sometimes spills into euphoria, as in âStuck in a Dreamâ which emerges like a mirage-born oasis between âEverybody Diesâ and âTrain on Fire,â a full-sprint crowd pleaser suitable for pogoing in the pit. âCare Lessâ is a dark, comic mirror to that energy, a garage-y jam in which an acid-tongued McCaughan seeks refuge from the storm by pretending itâs not raging right outside his door.
This strategy doesnât work. Of course it doesnât. Itâs a song on a Superchunk album, and Superchunk albums are arguments against insularity, parties large enough to host everyone. This one, in addition to welcoming Laura King into the fold after two years as their touring drummer, features contributions from Rosali Middleman (âBruised Lungâ and âEverybody Diesâ), Bella Quinlan and Holly Thomas of Quivers (âCueâ), and touring bassist Betsy Wright (âCare Lessâ). The album was engineered by Paul Voran (The Menzingers, Hurray for the Riff Raff) and Eli Webb, and mixed by Mike Montgomery (The Breeders, Protomartyr).
Together, they reach no conclusions on what good art is in the face of crisis. They also make great art. Songs in the Key of Yikes is a signature Superchunk album: visceral and timeless and catchy as hellâa cathartic balm for these oppressive times that will feel even better once weâve figured our collective shit out.
Original: $36.30
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âNo Hopeâ is similarly resilient, McCaughanâs lyrics painting a crushing scene before entering its titular refrain. He repeats the phrase nine times, pauses a beat, and transforms its sentiment entirely, breaking the chant with the line âand here we are singing.â The lyric is sharp, at once a simple observation and a profound statement of being, the songâs crushing nights and endless days no less so on its account, but McCaughanâs voice finds a certain sweetness in having endured, and continuing to do so.
Paradoxically, the energy of Songs in the Key of Yikes borders on and sometimes spills into euphoria, as in âStuck in a Dreamâ which emerges like a mirage-born oasis between âEverybody Diesâ and âTrain on Fire,â a full-sprint crowd pleaser suitable for pogoing in the pit. âCare Lessâ is a dark, comic mirror to that energy, a garage-y jam in which an acid-tongued McCaughan seeks refuge from the storm by pretending itâs not raging right outside his door.
This strategy doesnât work. Of course it doesnât. Itâs a song on a Superchunk album, and Superchunk albums are arguments against insularity, parties large enough to host everyone. This one, in addition to welcoming Laura King into the fold after two years as their touring drummer, features contributions from Rosali Middleman (âBruised Lungâ and âEverybody Diesâ), Bella Quinlan and Holly Thomas of Quivers (âCueâ), and touring bassist Betsy Wright (âCare Lessâ). The album was engineered by Paul Voran (The Menzingers, Hurray for the Riff Raff) and Eli Webb, and mixed by Mike Montgomery (The Breeders, Protomartyr).
Together, they reach no conclusions on what good art is in the face of crisis. They also make great art. Songs in the Key of Yikes is a signature Superchunk album: visceral and timeless and catchy as hellâa cathartic balm for these oppressive times that will feel even better once weâve figured our collective shit out.

















