Four years into making their fourth album, Frog in Boiling Water, the four members of DIIV needed to talk -- not later, but now.
The extended process had been uncertain and sometimes grueling, not only pushing them to up their musicianship but also taxing most every resource and bond they had ever cultivated. During the prior decade, DIIV had helped revitalize dream-pop and shoegaze alike, culminating in 2019's unapologetic genre showcase, Deceiver. But with it, DIIV were now out of contract, proverbial free agents who didn't owe anything to anyone but themselves -- that is, to make a record that challenged them, that pushed their sound beyond any previous parameters.
But after all that collective toil, their relationships with one another were fraying badly inside that singular alchemical state of being a band, where dynamics of family, friendship, and finances become entangled in a Gordian knot. There were suspicions and resentments, bruised egos and anxious questions, all fingerprints left by a quest that demanded DIIV grow both together and apart. So on June 1, 2023, just before they began to mix four years of effort, DIIV -- Andrew Bailey, Colin Caulfield, Ben Newman, and Zachary Cole Smith -- gathered in Echo Park Lake, the scene of so many halcyon hangs in their early days, under vaguely gray skies to air accumulated grievances. They dropped the shields of professionalism that had let them work amid the rancor and allowed themselves to get mad and bummed, real and vulnerable. Really, it could have broken DIIV before Frog in Boiling Water was finished.
Four years into making their fourth album, Frog in Boiling Water, the four members of DIIV needed to talk -- not later, but now.
The extended process had been uncertain and sometimes grueling, not only pushing them to up their musicianship but also taxing most every resource and bond they had ever cultivated. During the prior decade, DIIV had helped revitalize dream-pop and shoegaze alike, culminating in 2019's unapologetic genre showcase, Deceiver. But with it, DIIV were now out of contract, proverbial free agents who didn't owe anything to anyone but themselves -- that is, to make a record that challenged them, that pushed their sound beyond any previous parameters.
But after all that collective toil, their relationships with one another were fraying badly inside that singular alchemical state of being a band, where dynamics of family, friendship, and finances become entangled in a Gordian knot. There were suspicions and resentments, bruised egos and anxious questions, all fingerprints left by a quest that demanded DIIV grow both together and apart. So on June 1, 2023, just before they began to mix four years of effort, DIIV -- Andrew Bailey, Colin Caulfield, Ben Newman, and Zachary Cole Smith -- gathered in Echo Park Lake, the scene of so many halcyon hangs in their early days, under vaguely gray skies to air accumulated grievances. They dropped the shields of professionalism that had let them work amid the rancor and allowed themselves to get mad and bummed, real and vulnerable. Really, it could have broken DIIV before Frog in Boiling Water was finished.
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