Death Cab Built a Tower. Now They’re Ready to Tear It Down.
Death Cab for Cutie are back — and they brought a whole new chapter with them. The band, Benjamin Gibbard, Nicholas Harmer, Jason McGerr, Dave Depper and Zac Rae, just dropped the news: their 11th studio album, I Built You A Tower, arrives June 5th on ANTI- Records. It’s their first record on an indie label in 20 years, and honestly? It feels right.
First single “Riptides” is out now, and it hits exactly like you’d hope. Gibbard describes it as being about “the challenge of dealing with personal struggles as the world around us experiences tragedy and loss on an unfathomable scale” — that gut-punch feeling of your own life crumbling quietly while everything outside is already on fire.
The backstory here is worth knowing. While Death Cab and the Postal Service were filling arenas on back-to-back Transatlanticism and Plans anniversary runs, Gibbard was quietly working through the collapse of his personal life offstage. The “tower” became a metaphor for the container we build around grief just to keep functioning. Heavy stuff — but the record doesn’t wallow in it.
Recorded in just three weeks at Animal Rites in LA, plus home studios scattered across Seattle, Bellingham, Portland and beyond, the album was produced and engineered by John Congleton. Fast, scrappy, intentional. Depper puts it well: “The anniversary tours exorcised any nostalgia in our systems. We felt part of this powerful force greater than all of us.” And Harmer adds that the sessions pulled the band back to their earliest instincts — if the people in the room love it, that’s the whole job.
This isn’t some tidy “return to form” story. It’s something better: a band of 30 years reconnecting with why they started, then sprinting forward. Pre-order below and go stream “Riptides” right now.
Pre-order I Built You A Tower ↗
The Fire Note is an independent-music website that mixes record-store culture with lively, opinionated music journalism. It publishes: Album reviews and features – Covering indie-rock, punk, folk, experimental music, and underground scenes.




