

Certainly, Smoke + Mirrors is rock so large it's cavernous - the reverb nearly functions as a fifth instrument in the band - but the group's straight-faced commitment to the patently ridiculous has its charm, particularly because they possess no sense of pretension. Despite the bloozy bluster of "I'm So Sorry" - a Black Keys number stripped of any sense of R&B groove - the group usually favors the sky-scraping sentiment of Coldplay, but where Chris Martin's crew often seems pious, there's a genial bros-next-door quality to Imagine Dragons that deflates their grandiosity. They ratchet up their signature stomp - it's there on "I Bet My Life," the first single and a song that's meant to reassure fans that they're not going to get something different the second time around - but they've also wisely decided to broaden their horizons, seizing the possibilities offered by fellow arena rockers Coldplay and Black Keys. Bigger and bolder than 2012's Night Visions, Smoke + Mirrors captures a band so intoxicated with their sudden surprise success that they've decided to indulge in every excess.
#GOLD IMAGINE DRAGONS ALBUM FULL#
Imagine Dragons downplay the glamour the Killers found so alluring but they share a taste for the overblown, something that comes to full fruition on their second album, Smoke + Mirrors.

Conspicuously absent from the laundry list of influences the Imagine Dragons so often cite is the Killers, the only other Las Vegas rock band of note.
