I Can Feel You Forgetting Me

I Can Feel You Forgetting Me

$53.95
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The six years separating Pop Psychology and I Can Feel You Forgetting Me was a big enough gap that fans could have easily forgotten about Neon Trees. Fortunately, their fourth album delivers a memorable update on their music. They didn't have to change much: the '80s sounds that inspired them back in the Habits days were still as popular as ever at the time of I Can Feel You Forgetting Me's release. For their first album of the 2020s, Tyler Glenn and company give their pulse-pounding pop a washy, atmospheric haze in keeping with the era's production values. This echo-laden sound is a perfect fit for the slightly haunted vibe of I Can Feel You Forgetting Me's songs. Glenn has always chronicled lust, love, and loss in witty detail, and his examinations of nonconfrontational, "ghosting" breakups that leave the ones left behind wondering what went wrong are filled with the kind of earworm choruses, wordplay, and multiple hooks usually heard in '80s pop and show tunes. Considering that Glen

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