"When everything ends, can we do it again?" Win Butler asks on "WE," the closing title track of Arcade Fire's sixth record, and this will probably not be the only review to point out that it comes off like a mission statement for the entire album. Arcade Fire's last album, 2017's disappointing Everything Now, was met with the most negative reviews of the band's career, a noticeable drop in ticket sales, and it felt like the end of the era that Arcade Fire had helped create. The type of unabashed ambition, earnestness, and whimsy that they had won everyone over with on their 2004 debut album Funeral was not only absent from Everything Now, it was absent from both the mainstream that Arcade Fire had infiltrated and the indie rock underground that they came from. The era that Funeral ushered in only seems like a more distant memory now than it did when Everything Now came out, and it doesn't seem too crazy to wonder if the world has just moved on from Arcade Fire. But maybe being faced with that harsh reality is just what Arcade Fire needed to write WE, their most consistent and cohesive record since 2010's chart-topping, Grammy award-winning The Suburbs. It's a return to the form that birthed Arcade Fire's first three classic records, and even if that seems out of fashion, it's out of fashion in the best, most Arcade Fire way possible. They don't necessarily sound like they're trying to steer the culture with this one; they just sound like they're being themselves, honing in on what they've always done best, and coming out with some of the most affecting music of their career.
Broken down into five sections -- "Age of Anxiety I & II," "End of the Empire I-IV," "The Lightning I & II," "Unconditional I & II," and "WE" -- WE's presentation recalls the sprawl of The Suburbs, but the songs within these often-lengthy pieces feel concise the way Funeral and Neon Bible did. Each of the first four parts feels like its own mini rock opera, with the title track acting as the comedown that ties it all together. (Comparisons to Quadrophenia would be warranted even if the opening of "The Lighting" didn't sound exactly like Quadrophenia.) It feels humble and ambitious all at once. In other words, it feels like Arcade Fire.