Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks: Mirror Traffic

Stephen Malkmus’ self-titled 2001 solo debut was a welcome reminder that the former Pavement frontman could be fleet, hooky, and fun. But in the three LPs that followed, Malkmus disappeared further and further into his amateur prog-rock guitar-god side. The albums were still fundamentally enjoyable, with a handful of strong songs each, but they showed Malkmus increasingly following the path of the talented hobbyist, not of a man who helped define and elevate indie-rock in the ‘90s. Mirror Traffic is Malkmus’ fifth record with his backing band The Jicks, and feels more like a real album than anything he’s done since ‘01. Mirror Traffic was co-produced by fellow alt-rock icon Beck, who works with Malkmus to expand his arrangements a little and to embrace his laconic West Coast pop side on songs like the horn-enhanced acoustic ballad “No One Is (As I Are Be)” and the buzzy, echoing “Stick Figures In Love.” Malkmus hasn’t sounded this engaged and willing to entertain in a decade.