For someone who’s spent nearly half his young life as a professional musician, Dylan Baldi still has solid work-life boundaries: The free jazz, ambient instrumentals, and acoustic experiments he’s posted to Bandcamp have yet to leach into the bottle-rocket pop-punk of Cloud Nothings. But the first single off their new album, Final Summer, has finally allowed one of Baldi’s extracurricular activities to infiltrate the band’s creative process. “I’m trying to [run] a marathon in every state,” he recently boasted, and while countless time trials and deadlifts have been set to “Stay Useless” and “Psychic Trauma,” “Running Through the Campus” suggests a more focused sort of cardiovascular exercise. “It’s just a thing I do for myself,” Baldi rasps, sounding like someone in tune with the discipline of physical and mental upkeep, and the usefulness of tracking incremental progress and pragmatic goals. That’s really where Cloud Nothings find themselves on their latest album, the first since Baldi entered his thirties. It’s a satisfying series of sprints from a band committed for the long haul.
Final Summer radiates a renewed sense of purpose for a band that had begun to feel like they were spinning their wheels. Up until the remotely recorded The Black Hole Understands, Cloud Nothings switched up producers on every album, lending a distinct character to records that otherwise work within a fairly narrow sound. Reuniting with Steve Albini on The Shadow I Remember drew on the goodwill generated by their most beloved album, yet it felt like a cheat code on a set of songs that lacked the frothing urgency of Attack on Memory. Just about everything leading up to Final Summer seemed to acknowledge the opportunity for a retooling, if not a total reboot: unexpected yet sensible new tourmates, new producer, new label, all signifying security in their status as a legacy band in 2024.
But you’d never guess any of that from the title track. A synth twinkles for a minute, and then another one, before the vocals enter. The mesmeric, three-note riff is more like amped-up Krautrock than spiky pop-punk. If the instrumental bridge doesn’t quite approximate Baldi’s alto sax recordings, it at least sounds like MIDI horns. Jayson Gerycz eases up on his typically runaway locomotion and propels “Final Summer” forward like a bullet train. At once instantly recognizable as Cloud Nothings and having no precedent in their catalog, “Final Summer” marks the first time in years that an entirely new lane has opened up for the band.