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Well, boo hoo, right? Not necessarily, because the attributes that allowed the quartet to take that step from Austin up-and-comers to Barsuk-underwritten road dogs — keen pop instincts, dense arrangements, principal frontman Michael Kingcaid's constitution-straining sincerity — have survived the transition intact, and the result is a set of songs as cathartic to listen to as they must be for the band to perform night after night. Strikingly similar to Queen in spots, the album is a good deal heavier than 2006 debut Trying to Never Catch Up — indeed, the murky power-chord volley that begins opener "Blood, Sweat & Fears" might fool listeners into thinking they've somehow purchased the new Sword album by mistake — and "Self-Destruct" and "Resistance St." likewise build to fearsome crescendos. All that effort eventually pays off, too: What Doesn't Kill Us lightens up toward the end, as the rollicking, Violent Femmes-like "To Each His Own" twists some of John Lennon's better-known "Imagine" lyrics into a steely manifesto of persistence from a band seasoned enough to know that packing it in now would be all too easy.— Michael Gallucci and Chris Gray