Fans of Algernon Cadwallader during their original run claim lifelong bragging rights for having seen them play a late-2000s basement show with sweaty floors and a fisheye-toting Flickr photographer—and they probably have the blown-out YouTube video to prove it. Across the Northeast, the Philadelphia emo band paid its dues at every VFW hall, youth community center, and dilapidated DIY house that opened its doors. In the seven years before they called it quits, Algernon were a refreshingly haphazard and wildly fun live act. The longer the crowd bellowed like a football team to open “Serial Killer Status,” the higher scrawny teens flung themselves to “Katie’s Conscious”; the faster the drive home through pitch-black suburbs, the stronger the urge to burn a CD for your friends so you could scream “If fucking up feels right/Then fuck it up” together.
But statistically, the more impressive feat is having seen the band at a music venue with an active permit—bigger capacity, rarer opportunity. By the time Joyce Manor tapped Algernon Cadwallader for a fall 2012 tour, the promise of seeing them play inside a proper establishment felt monumental: Algernon on a raised stage? Through a professional sound system? Walking up to the storied Cambridge club T.T. the Bear’s, I remember doubting the run of show on the whiteboard; in what world were Joyce Manor, West Coast pop-punkers getting message-board backlash for their lo-fi pivot, headlining over Algernon, East Coast darlings already being cited as an influence on their peers? Watching with a clear view, mic stands no longer in danger of being knocked over by a sudden convulsion of the crowd, I thought Algernon Cadwallader were poised to blow up. Now that they had a stage, how were they going to use it?
Your guess was as good as theirs. Four days later, Algernon Cadwallader broke up. Members dispersed to Hop Along and Dogs on Acid, and a new wave of emo bands tried to recapture the twinkly guitars and frantic poetics of the soon-to-be-pegged “revival” forefathers. But 14 years after their last album, Algernon Cadwallader finally return to answer the question. Trying Not to Have a Thought is the first LP with their original lineup—vocalist-bassist Peter Helmis, guitarists Joe Reinhart and Colin Mahony, and drummer Nick Tazza—since their 2008 debut-turned-emo classic Some Kind of Cadwallader, and their first release since 2011’s Parrot Flies. It’s a comeback album that reintroduces four friends who still crave technical prowess and percussive playfulness. More than that, it makes the case for why emo was never just about adolescent angst, but the purity of feeling alive in the present.