After seven long years, The Antlers are back with their sixth album, Green to Gold. It is a welcomed return. And a sunnier one?
Unlike past Antlers albums, Peter Silberman has said that he didn’t feel compelled to turn a human experience into a circuitous mythology and all the eeriness that goes along with it. He chose a more direct approach, documenting two years in his life, without overthinking or obscuring what the songs were about. The shift in tone he said is the result of getting older.
“It doesn’t make sense for me to try to tap into the same energy that I did ten or fifteen years ago, because I continue to grow as a person, as I’m sure our audience does too. Green to Gold is about this idea of gradual change,” he sums up. “People changing over time, struggling to accept change in those they love, and struggling to change themselves. And yet despite all our difficulty with this, nature somehow makes it look easy.”
Conceived and written almost entirely in the morning hours, Green To Gold shimmers like sunlight pouring through the kitchen window on a Sunday morning. It’s an album that I would not have expected from The Antlers, but one that I am grateful to have.