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The Sounding Board

The joy of Cola is fleeting

A weekly column where New Music Tuesdays live on. Conversation is encouraged in the comments.

Cost of Living Adjustment

Every Tuesday, the Sounding Board is a space for a short-ish review of a recent-ish release and conversations about new-to-you music. We’ll get things started with a write-up about a newer, likely under-heard album, and invite you to share your music musings in the comments.

Cola’s sort-of self-titled album proves the sustaining and sustained power of the punk and post-punk canon. 

Cost of Living Adjustment is the third LP from the Montreal trio, who rose from the ashes of the much-admired band Ought.1 It was clearly made by and for people who have heard, digested and been fortified by the pantheon of cool kid essentials that keep every “Best Albums of All-Time” list from being just an exercise in re-ranking the same few dozen albums by Bob Dylan, the Beatles, Stevie Wonder, Prince, the Rolling Stones, and Pet Sounds. 

Cola’s latest bears the genetic markers of Television, the Modern Lovers, the Cure, the Smiths, the Talking Heads, Wire, Killing Joke and the myriad bands who have revived, remixed or ripped off elements from those luminaries.2 Cost of Living Adjustment is an album packed with lead vocalist Tim Darcy’s droll-but-not-dispassionate observations about how the world works and abstract imagery, backed by a blend of Ben Stidworthy’s sonorous, impellent bass, Evan Cartwright’s lively drums, and Darcy’s chiming guitar, all kept firmly tethered to earth by a spacious, artfully muddy mix.

It’s that last feature that helps set Cost of Living Adjustment apart from Cola’s contemporaries and the band’s previous LPs. Deep in View, Cola’s 2022 debut, is similarly scruffy, but it’s also quiet to the point of sounding muffled. The Gloss, released in 2024 and suitably named, stands as the cleanest and clearest album in Cola’s discography. The darker, hazier, stretched-and-compressed tinge doesn’t radically change Cola’s music, but it is noticeably different.

There is a sometimes sibilant murkiness throughout the album that practically radiates the same musk as a box of secondhand records, and it is made more interesting by bucking the usual pattern of a band cleaning up its sound over time. It’s a change that came from within, too. While Valentin Ignat, who recorded the first two Cola albums, engineered and mixed COLA, this time around, the band is credited with arrangement and production.3

It’s a direction that serves the songs well, creating a sense of heft through texture and further solidifying an out-of-time feeling, like small, dark rooms granted additional dimension by flickering candlelight. That extra pinch of personality is especially welcome because while COLA is devoid of bad songs, none of its tracks stand out as truly exceptional either. The lows are incredibly high, and the highs are pretty good.

There are enough interesting lyrics and musical flourishes scattered throughout COLA’s runtime to keep the album interesting. “We’re like two birds of paradise/ Locked out of our home/ And what is that home? Well, it is paradise, baby,” from “Polished Knives” sets a high-water mark for humor, while “You said it best, you cannot best a wave/ It either crests or passes by,” is a lovely bit of serenity within “Much of Muchness,” possibly the most straightforward post-punk song on the album — although there isn’t a ton of competition for that post.

Many of COLA‘s songs include a twist or stylistic tweak not found elsewhere on the album. “Conflagration Mindset” is an ultra-woozy song that should soundtrack the slow-motion punches people throw in their dreams. “Hedgesitting” uses drums and a sample loop to explore dreamy, dance-y terrain.4 “Fainting Spells” starts with frail plucking reminiscent of a wind-up music box, finding stability and substance when bass enters the picture. “Haveluck Country” begins as the album’s most driving song with bursts of guitar and thudding drums trading punches. A spindly bassline manages to get in between the combatants, pushing the pace harder and threatening to send the song into a higher gear. However, the kinetic potential fizzles, and the tightly wound song unravels into loose strands of echoing, delay-drenched guitar. When Darcy practically sighs, “Oh, it’s painfully serene/ Crime without a payoff,” he could be describing the current song.

Similarly, “Conflagration Mindset” never becomes the kind of serrated noise or sludgy, narcotized soundscape it could become, “Fainting Spells” brings back its plinking opening near the end of the song to do more of the same, and “Hedgesitting” never quite achieves the blissed-out party mode embodied by the best Madchester songs. Cola has good ideas, but they rarely reach a cathartic conclusion.

“Favoured to Ride,” COLA‘s penultimate track, is the exception. Darcy delivers his most forceful, emotive vocals over ringing, jangly chords. It’s legitimately stirring and gets a forward push from Stidworthy and Cartwright’s tight work. Bright, bubbling keys courtesy of Cartwright rise in the mix and add speckles of lightness. Intensity, volume and tempo all increase, and Darcy sings the song’s title four times over what sounds like a calliope-assisted breakdown. It’s handily the most triumphant moment on the LP, and Cola deploys it again in the back half of the song to set up a sweet guitar-key fadeout.

A few more go-for-broke moments like that would go a long way toward elevating an admirable, quite good post-punk album, but the base model delivered is well worth spending time with.

  1. Ought was a band I kind of liked, but was never in my personal heavy rotation. Tim Darcy, Cola’s guitarist and vocalist, and Ben Stidworthy, who plays both bass and guitar on Cost of Living Adjustment, were in Ought. Cola’s third member is Evan Cartwright, who has also played with U.S. Girls. I had no memory of this association, which seemed weird since I wrote about U.S. Girls in this space last year. Scratch It, U.S. Girls’ pretty good 2025 album, is Meg Remy plus a handful of Nashville ringers, so no Cartwright on that LP. ↩︎
  2. The Clash’s Paul Simonon is also apparently a formative influence on Stidworthy’s bass playing, but I wouldn’t have picked up on that without the band’s recent Reddit Q&A. ↩︎
  3. It doesn’t sound like a John Congleton joint to me, but I nevertheless expected him to be involved because he’s everywhere, and COLA‘s musical adventurousness reminded me a lot of the most recent shame album. Maybe for Cola LP4. ↩︎
  4. To my ears, Darcy seems to be channeling Shaun Ryder on this track, which is a nice touch. ↩︎