The New Abnormal is the sixth studio album by the American rock band the Strokes, released on April 10, 2020, through the independent label Cult Records and RCA Records.[1] Recorded primarily at Shangri-La Studios in Malibu, California, the album was produced by Rick Rubin and represents the band's first full-length studio effort since Comedown Machine in 2013, following a period of internal conflicts and side projects among members.[2]The record blends the Strokes' signature garage rock and post-punk revival sound with electronic and synth-pop influences, featuring tracks like "The Adults Are Talking" and "Bad Decisions" that revisit themes of urban alienation and personal relationships.[3] It debuted at number eight on the USBillboard 200 chart, selling 35,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, and topped the Top Rock Albums chart, marking the band's strongest commercial performance in nearly a decade.[4] Critically, The New Abnormal received widespread acclaim for revitalizing the band's energy, earning a Grammy Award for Best Rock Album at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards in 2021—their first win after multiple nominations.[5]While praised for its production polish and nostalgic appeal amid the early COVID-19 pandemic—whose societal disruptions echoed the album's title—the release faced no major controversies, though some reviewers noted it as a solid but not revolutionary return rather than a bold evolution.[6] The album's artwork, a reproduction of Jean-Michel Basquiat's 1982 painting Untitled (Head), further tied it to New York City's cultural heritage, underscoring the band's enduring connection to their hometown roots.[2]
Development
Conception and songwriting
The Strokes began conceptualizing material for The New Abnormal after concluding promotional activities for their 2013 album Comedown Machine, during which band members pursued solo endeavors and side projects, leading to an extended hiatus from full-group recording.[7] Formal development accelerated in 2017 when the band enlisted producer Rick Rubin, initiating sessions at his Shangri-La studio in Malibu, California, with the aim of recapturing their raw, garage-rock energy while refining arrangements through Rubin's minimalist production style.[8] This collaboration emphasized stripping extraneous elements from compositions, allowing core riffs and melodies to emerge organically from group improvisation.[6]The album's title originated from California Governor Jerry Brown's characterization of the state's intensifying wildfires as "the new abnormal" amid the 2018 Woolsey Fire, which scorched areas near Shangri-La and symbolized broader environmental and societal disruptions—a theme that resonated presciently upon the album's April 2020 release amid the COVID-19 pandemic, though unintended by the band.[7] Songwriting drew from accumulated demos and ideas spanning several years, with frontman Julian Casablancas handling primary lyric duties, infusing tracks with introspective narratives on personal vulnerability, romantic yearning, and cultural malaise, as evident in lines from "At the Door" ("I’m an ugly boy / Holding out the night") and "Selfless."[9]Guitarists Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jr. played pivotal roles in crafting instrumental foundations, developing hooks and riffs—such as the driving guitar line in "The Adults Are Talking"—through extended jamming that prioritized band cohesion over individual egos.[10] Bassist Nikolai Fraiture initially hesitated to contribute ideas but grew more confident, reflecting improved group dynamics and reduced interpersonal tension compared to prior albums like Room on Fire.[9] Drummer Fabrizio Moretti focused on rhythmic propulsion that echoed the band's early post-punk influences while accommodating subtle electronic textures, resulting in a songwriting process Casablancas described as refreshingly low-pressure and communicative.[9]
Recording sessions
The recording sessions for The New Abnormal began in 2017, marking the first collaboration between The Strokes and producer Rick Rubin.[11] The band worked intermittently over the subsequent years, balancing the project with members' individual endeavors, such as Albert Hammond Jr.'s solo releases and Julian Casablancas's activities with The Voidz.[12] Primary sessions occurred at Rubin's Shangri-La Studios in Malibu, California, a facility known for its isolation and high-fidelity setup conducive to focused production.[13]Bassist Nikolai Fraiture described the process as evoking the collaborative spirit of the band's 2001 debut Is This It, emphasizing jam sessions that generated core ideas.[9] Casablancas echoed this, calling it the least stressful recording experience since their first album, crediting improved band dynamics and Rubin's guidance in refining demos into full tracks.[9] Rubin played a hands-on role, encouraging the group to prioritize live instrumentation over overdubs, which helped recapture their raw garage rock edge while incorporating subtle electronic elements.[6]Fraiture admitted to initial nervousness when presenting rough ideas to Rubin, reflecting the producer's reputation for elevating material through minimalistic interventions.[9] The extended timeline stemmed from creative experimentation rather than discord, with the album finalized shortly before its April 10, 2020 release, unaffected by the emerging COVID-19 pandemic in terms of production.[9] This approach contrasted with prior Strokes efforts, yielding a cohesive nine-track record clocking in at 45 minutes.[13]
Musical elements
Style and genre
The New Abnormal is classified as indie rock, with additional stylistic elements of alternative/indie rock and new wave/post-punk revival.[14][15] The album's sound builds on the Strokes' foundational garage rock and post-punk influences from their early 2000s work, but shifts toward a more polished, synth-infused aesthetic reminiscent of 1980snew wave and synthpop.[16] This evolution is evident in the use of glossy production techniques, electronic textures, and pop rock structures, as noted in genre tagging across music databases.[17]Produced by Rick Rubin at studios including Shangri-La in Malibu, the record features angular guitar riffs, driving rhythms, and Julian Casablancas' signature detached vocal delivery, but incorporates longer, more expansive song forms averaging around five minutes per track.[3][18] Influences from 1980s acts like Billy Idol and the Psychedelic Furs appear in melodic hooks and atmospheric layers, creating a blend of retro revivalism and contemporary indie experimentation without fully departing from the band's core rock identity.[3] Critics have described it as a "sea change in style" that fuses these elements into a cohesive, New York-centric sound, though some note its sluggish pacing as a departure from the taut energy of debut Is This It.[19][3]
Lyrics and thematic content
The lyrics of The New Abnormal, largely penned by vocalist Julian Casablancas, incorporate a heightened political dimension relative to prior Strokes releases, stemming from Casablancas's longstanding engagement with issues such as corporate dominance and electoral politics.[20] Casablancas has articulated a view of corporate entities as the central adversary in modern power structures, influencing tracks that critique media sensationalism and elite influence.[9] This aligns with his public endorsement of Bernie Sanders during the 2020 Democratic primaries, where he performed at a rally on February 19, 2020, though he expressed reservations about subsequent candidates.[21]Overarching themes encompass personal alienation, nostalgia for pre-disruption stability, and reluctant adaptation to upheaval, encapsulated in the album's title—a phrase Casablancas borrowed from California Governor Jerry Brown's 2018 remarks on wildfire-exacerbated droughts, which retrospectively evoked the COVID-19 pandemic's societal shifts.[21] Songs like "Why Are Sundays So Depressing" evoke isolation through lines such as "All my friends left / And they don’t miss me," while "At the Door" depicts emotional desolation on "the cold floor … waiting for the tide to rise," though Casablancas has rejected interpretations framing these as admissions of vulnerability, attributing stylistic choices like louder vocals to production decisions rather than intent.[21][9]Environmental precarity surfaces in "Eternal Summer," with references to an unending heat signaling climate distress, contrasting sleek instrumentation against disjointed bridges that underscore unresolved tension.[3] Interpersonal dynamics appear in "Selfless," probing self-sacrifice and societal pressures akin to body-shaming, amid abrupt structural shifts mirroring relational instability.[3] The closing "Ode to the Mets," spanning nearly six minutes with layered arrangements, employs baseball as a loose metaphor for enduring loyalty amid letdown—composed on a New York subway platform post-2016 Mets playoff defeat—but Casablancas emphasizes interpretive openness, prioritizing emotional resonance over literalism and noting Fabrizio Moretti's view of it as capturing unconditional attachment.[22]Recurrent imagery, such as doors in multiple tracks, symbolizes liminal states and the prospect of renewal, reflecting the band's navigation of internal conflicts and external chaos during the album's seven-year gestation.[23] Broader motifs of regret, guilt, and progression toward acceptance thread through the record, as Casablancas reconciles past band tensions with forward momentum, though he maintains ambiguity to invite listener projection.[9][22]
Artwork and presentation
Cover artwork
The cover artwork for The New Abnormal features a cropped portion of Jean-Michel Basquiat's 1981 painting Bird on Money.[24] The original work, an acrylic and oil on canvas measuring 66 by 90 inches, is housed in the Rubell Family Collection.[25]Bird on Money is a Neo-Expressionist piece characterized by Basquiat's graffiti-inspired style, including scrawled text, symbolic imagery, and a central depiction of a bird perched atop a stack of dollar bills.[26] It serves as a tribute to jazz saxophonist Charlie "Bird" Parker, whom Basquiat admired, while incorporating critiques of materialism and power structures through its contrasting motifs of freedom and commerce.[27][28] The selection of this New York City-associated artwork reflects the album's roots in the city's cultural landscape, though the band has not publicly detailed the precise rationale for its use beyond official announcements crediting the painting.[29]
Packaging details
The vinyl LP edition of The New Abnormal was pressed on 180-gram heavyweight vinyl, with variants including standard black and a limited opaque red pressing released on April 10, 2020.[17][30] These pressings were housed in a clear APET slipcase or hard PVC outer sleeve with cling wrap, eschewing traditional jacket artwork for a plastic overlay design that has been described as unconventional.[30][31] Accompanying inserts included a custom inner sleeve, a 24" x 36" foldout poster, and a digital download card.[30][32]The compact disc edition utilized O-card packaging, a cardboard sleeve format that provides a slim, protective enclosure without a jewel case.[33] A deluxe vinyl variant, featuring a 100-page photo booklet with previously unseen images, was also produced for select releases.[34] All physical formats emphasized minimalist presentation aligned with the album's artwork, prioritizing durability and supplementary media over elaborate booklets in the standard editions.[30]
Release and marketing
Announcement and singles
The Strokes announced The New Abnormal, their first studio album in seven years, on February 11, 2020, through a press release and social media posts, scheduling its release for April 10, 2020, via Cult Records and RCA Records.[2][35] The announcement followed live debuts of new material, including "Bad Decisions", at a February 10 performance supporting a political rally in New York City.[36]The lead single, "At the Door", accompanied the album reveal, featuring an animated music video directed by Mike Burakoff and showcasing psychedelic visuals aligned with the track's electronic influences.[35][37] "Bad Decisions" followed as the second single on February 18, 2020, with lyrics critiquing media sensationalism and a video parodying news broadcasts.[1]The third and final pre-album single, "Brooklyn Bridge to Chorus", arrived on April 6, 2020, emphasizing new wave elements and serving as a thematic bridge to the album's title, which references a term popularized by CNN anchor Don Lemon for societal dysfunction.[38][39] These singles generated anticipation amid the early COVID-19 pandemic, with no physical singles released, focusing instead on digital platforms and streaming.[2]
Promotional activities and tours
The Strokes scheduled a series of North American tour dates in spring 2020 to support The New Abnormal, including performances at Rogers Arena in Vancouver on March 5, WaMu Theater in Seattle on March 9, Smoothie King Center in New Orleans on May 2, Toyota Center in Houston on May 4, and Germania Insurance Amphitheater in Austin on May 9.[40][41] These shows were announced prior to the album's release and intended to build anticipation, but the escalating COVID-19 pandemic led to widespread event cancellations and postponements, preventing the tour from proceeding as planned.[42]Post-release promotional efforts were constrained by lockdowns, with the band opting for limited virtual and television appearances. On April 10, 2020—the album's release date—The Strokes released a track-by-track video commentary series discussing the record's creation and themes.[42] They later performed "The Adults Are Talking" and "Bad Decisions" on Saturday Night Live on November 1, 2020, marking their fourth appearance on the program and showcasing material from the album amid ongoing restrictions.[43]The band did not conduct a dedicated headline tour for The New Abnormal in 2020 or 2021 due to the pandemic's impact on live music. Resumed performances in late 2021, such as their October 29 show at The Forum in Inglewood, California, incorporated five tracks from the album into the setlist, including "Bad Decisions" and others, signaling a gradual return to touring.[44] A planned New Year's Eve concert at Madison Square Garden on December 31, 2021, was postponed to April 1, 2022, owing to the Omicron variant surge, further delaying full-scale live promotion.[45]
Reception and analysis
Critical reviews
The New Abnormal garnered generally favorable critical reception upon its release on April 10, 2020, accumulating a Metacritic score of 75 out of 100 based on 25 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews."[46] This aggregate placed it among the band's stronger efforts post-debut, though below the critical acclaim of their 2001 album Is This It. Reviewers frequently noted the album's blend of the band's signature garage rock energy with more polished production under Rick Rubin, yet opinions diverged on whether it recaptured early dynamism or felt derivative.Rolling Stone lauded the record as potentially "their best since the glory days of the early 2000s," praising its incorporation of 1980s synth-pop and new wave elements while affirming the Strokes' core sound, produced with a sense of renewed cohesion.[18] Similarly, NME assigned it 4 out of 5 stars, observing that the band maintained emotional distance in lyrics but introduced "traces of deeper introspection," particularly in tracks reflecting personal and societal unease.[47] Outlets like The Alternative described it as striking a "sweet spot" without matching the debut's impact, appreciating its melodic hooks and potential for future growth.[48]Conversely, Pitchfork delivered a more tepid assessment with a 5.7 out of 10 rating, critiquing the album as "sluggish and slight," akin to a "hangover" after seven years' absence, with hooks overshadowed by uninspired pacing.[3]The Guardian echoed frustrations, rating it 3 out of 5 stars and deeming it a "frustrating listen despite its gleam," attributing shortcomings to insufficient tempo variation and a perceived air of indifference persisting from prior releases.[49] Such critiques highlighted inconsistencies in energy levels across the nine tracks, contrasting with praise for standouts like "The Adults Are Talking" and "Bad Decisions." Overall, the discourse positioned The New Abnormal as a solid but uneven revival, buoyed by the band's enduring influence amid a landscape of diminished post-punk revival output.
Positive assessments
Critics who praised The New Abnormal often highlighted its return to the band's early garage rock energy while incorporating mature introspection, positioning it as a strong evolution from their 2013 album Comedown Machine.[18][50]Rolling Stone described the album as a "triumphant return" with "vivid, emotional songwriting," suggesting it might be the Strokes' best work since their debut Is This It in 2001, crediting producer Rick Rubin's crisp, modern production for enhancing their classic sound.[18]The guitar riffs and song structures drew particular acclaim for recapturing the band's signature urgency. NME lauded the Strokes as "still the best riff-makers around," pointing to tracks like "Bad Decisions" and "Why Are Sundays So Depressing" as "'Room on Fire'-style bangers" with metronomic, guitar-led drive, while "The Adults Are Talking" was called "unmistakably top-tier stuff" for its abrasive electronic drums overlaid with mellow vocals.[47] "Selfless" was praised for its "striking cinematic beauty" and "waltzing guitar," evoking piercing romance, and "At The Door" for its contemplative lyrics and stark pace shift.[47]Lyrically, reviewers noted a deepened focus on aging and self-reflection, with Julian Casablancas' vocals described as "diamond-sharp" and his songwriting as underestimated.[47]NME highlighted traces of "deeper introspection" across the record, such as in "Not The Same Anymore"'s haunting confessions about growing up. The New York Times emphasized how slower tempos revealed song intricacies, flipping nostalgia toward the future through interlocking melodies and counterpoint, building on the band's foundational albums like Is This It and Room on Fire.[51][47] Tracks like "Brooklyn Bridge to Chorus" were commended for catchy, anthemic qualities and relatable resignation in lines such as "I want new friends but they don’t want me."[18][51]
Criticisms and detractors
Critics have faulted The New Abnormal for its perceived lack of innovation, with songs often described as derivative amalgams of the band's earlier catalog, resulting in a stagnant feel devoid of fresh urgency.[52] This derivative quality was seen as emblematic of the Strokes' post-Is This It trajectory, where later efforts, including this album, recycle familiar garage-rock and new wave influences without evolving them meaningfully.[52]Pitchfork's review characterized the album as "sluggish and slight," arguing that its strongest elements were nostalgic callbacks rather than bold new material, contributing to a hangover-like malaise after a seven-year hiatus.[3] The publication awarded it a 5.8 out of 10, highlighting uneven pacing and hooks that failed to match the immediacy of the band's debut.[3]Production choices drew specific ire, particularly the mastering and instrumentals, which some longtime fans and reviewers viewed as a betrayal of the raw, lo-fi ethos established in prior works like Is This It (2001).[53] Detractors noted over-polished synth-like textures that mimicked 1980s influences without authentic integration, leading to accusations of superficial "credit rip-offs" amid sporadic brilliance rather than cohesive excellence.[54]Comparisons to the Strokes' peak output underscored broader disappointment, with outlets deeming the record merely "okay" and insufficiently transcendent, especially given high expectations for a pandemic-timed release that promised cultural resonance but delivered middling execution.[55] These critiques positioned The New Abnormal as another in a series of underwhelming follow-ups, reinforcing perceptions of creative plateauing since the mid-2000s.[52]
Commercial performance
The New Abnormal debuted at number 8 on the USBillboard 200 chart dated April 25, 2020, with 35,000 album-equivalent units, including 23,000 in pure album sales and 11,700 in streaming equivalent album units, marking the band's fifth top-10 album on the ranking.[4][56] It simultaneously entered at number 1 on both the Top Rock Albums and Top Alternative Albums charts, becoming the Strokes' first leader on the former since Angles in 2011 and their second overall on the latter.[4]In the United Kingdom, the album topped the Official Albums Chart for two non-consecutive weeks, starting April 17, 2020, after narrowly surpassing Dua Lipa's Future Nostalgia in sales during its opening frame; it spent a total of 11 weeks on the chart.[57] The release also achieved top-five peaks across several European territories, including number 2 in Portugal, and number 7 in Australia.[58]As of early 2023, the album had accumulated approximately 30,000 certified units in the United States, reflecting sustained but modest physical and downloadsales amid a streaming-dominated market.[59] No major certifications, such as RIAA Gold or Platinum, have been awarded to date.
Accolades and recognition
Awards won
The New Abnormal received the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards on March 14, 2021.[60][61] This victory marked the first Grammy win for The Strokes, the band having been nominated previously without success over their two-decade career.[62][63] The album defeated competitors including A Hero's Death by Fontaines D.C., Daylight by Grace Potter, Sound & Fury by Sturgill Simpson, and Connected Everywhere by Michael Kiwanuka.[64] No other major music awards were won by the album.[65]
Nominations and honors
The New Abnormal was nominated for Best Rock Album at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards, held on March 14, 2021, where it won the award, marking The Strokes' first Grammy victory after two decades in the industry with no previous nominations.[60][62] The album defeated competitors including Delilah by Black Pumas and Sound & Fury by Sturgill Simpson in the category.[66] No other major award nominations for the album have been documented in official records.[63]
Credits
Performing personnel
The New Abnormal, released on April 10, 2020, features performances exclusively by the five longstanding members of The Strokes, with no additional session or guest musicians credited across the album's nine tracks.[17] Julian Casablancas served as lead vocalist, delivering lyrics and melodies central to the record's garage rock and new wave influences.[17] Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jr. contributed guitars, providing the riff-driven and textural elements that define tracks like "The Adults Are Talking" and "Bad Decisions."[17] Nikolai Fraiture played bass, anchoring the rhythm section with lines that evoke the band's early post-punk revival sound.[17] Fabrizio Moretti handled drums, supplying the propulsive beats that underpin the album's energetic pacing.[17]The group collectively arranged all songs, indicating that any auxiliary instrumentation, such as keyboards or synthesizers heard on selections like "At the Door," was performed in-house by band members rather than external contributors.[17] This self-contained approach aligns with The Strokes' history of minimal external involvement in core recording sessions, emphasizing their collaborative dynamic during production at studios including Shangri-La in Malibu and Electric Lady in New York.[17]
Production team
The production of The New Abnormal was overseen by Rick Rubin, a veteran producer known for his work with artists including the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Johnny Cash, who guided the album's sessions emphasizing a return to the band's raw energy while incorporating modern production techniques.[17] Recording occurred primarily at Rubin's Shangri-La Studios in Malibu, California, a facility equipped for high-fidelity analog and digital capture that contributed to the album's polished yet organic sound.[17]Rob Schnapf, an engineer with credits on albums by Beck and Elliott Smith, handled both recording and mixing duties, focusing on preserving the Strokes' garage-rock roots amid overdubs and refinements developed over intermittent sessions spanning 2018 to 2019.[17] Mastering was completed by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound in New York, ensuring dynamic range and clarity suitable for vinyl and streaming formats released on April 10, 2020, via Cult Records and RCA.[17] This lean team structure reflected the album's protracted development, with Rubin providing high-level oversight rather than hands-on engineering.[51]
Track listing and formats
Standard edition tracks
The standard edition of The New Abnormal, released on April 10, 2020, by Cult Records and RCA Records, contains nine tracks with a total runtime of approximately 45 minutes.[67][68] The track listing is as follows:
This sequence reflects the original album configuration across digital, CD, and vinyl formats, without additional bonus tracks found in select international editions.[17][70]
Available formats
The New Abnormal was released on April 10, 2020, in multiple physical and digital formats through Cult and RCA Records.[13]Physical formats encompassed the standard compact disc (CD) album, available in regions including the United States, Europe, Japan, Mexico, and Colombia, often featuring a slipcase in select pressings.[71]Vinyl long-playing (LP) records were pressed on 180-gram audiophile-grade vinyl, with standard black editions bundled with a poster and digitaldownload code; limited variants included red opaque, white, green translucent (reissued in 2023), and picture disc editions.[72][17] A limited-edition cassette was also produced, initially intended as an exclusive for Record Store Day 2020 before wider limited availability in the US, Canada, and UK.[73][74]Digital formats included downloadable files such as MP3 at 320 kbit/s bitrate, AAC at 256 kbps, and high-resolution FLAC at 24-bit/96 kHz, enabling streaming and purchase via platforms like Spotify.[17][68] These options supported both lossy and lossless audio playback, catering to varying consumer preferences for quality and convenience.[17]
Commercial data
Chart positions
The New Abnormal debuted and peaked at number eight on the US Billboard 200, earning 35,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, marking the band's fifth top-10 entry on the chart.[4] It simultaneously topped the Billboard Top Rock Albums and Top Alternative Albums charts, the group's first number-one placements on both since 2011's Angles.[4]In the United Kingdom, the album reached number one on the Official Albums Chart, holding the position for two non-consecutive weeks and charting for a total of 11 weeks.[57]The album's international chart performance included the following peaks:
These positions reflect data aggregated from national chart authorities, with the album appearing on 15 global charts for a cumulative 89 weeks.[58][75]
Certifications and sales
In the United States, The New Abnormal debuted at number 8 on the Billboard 200 chart, earning 35,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, including 23,000 in pure album sales.[4][56] The album topped both the Top Rock Albums and Top Alternative Albums charts in that week.[4]The album has received limited certifications internationally. In France, it was certified gold by the Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique (SNEP) on May 30, 2024, denoting at least 50,000 equivalent units shipped.[76] In New Zealand, Recorded Music NZ awarded it gold certification on August 8, 2025, for sales exceeding 7,500 units.[77] No certifications have been issued by the RIAA in the United States or the BPI in the United Kingdom as of October 2025.
Legacy
Cultural impact
The release of The New Abnormal on April 10, 2020, aligned precisely with the onset of widespread COVID-19 lockdowns in New York City and across the United States, rendering its title an inadvertent encapsulation of the era's disruptions.[6] The phrase "the new abnormal" rapidly permeated media and public commentary to denote enforced social isolation, remote work, and eroded routines, paralleling the album's motifs of urban alienation, fleeting relationships, and escapist nostalgia.[51] This temporal coincidence amplified the record's relevance, positioning it as a cultural artifact of early pandemicmalaise rather than a deliberate prognosticator.Listeners and reviewers highlighted the album's role in furnishing auditory solace during confinement, with tracks like "At the Door"—featuring introspective lyrics on personal redemption—and "Bad Decisions," which obliquely critiqued political dysfunction through references to former President Donald Trump, offering cathartic release.[78][79] Its production, blending raw garage rock with polished 1980s synth textures under Rick Rubin's guidance, evoked a yearning for analog-era vitality amid digital-era stasis, aiding individual coping without prescribing collective action.[80]Though lacking the genre-redefining force of the band's 2001 debut Is This It, The New Abnormal sustained The Strokes' archetype of detached cool in indie rock, subtly reinforcing themes of resilience against commercial and societal pressures that echoed broader 2020 disillusionments with authority and excess.[81] The album's Grammy Award for Best Rock Album in March 2021 further cemented its status as a benchmark for mature rock output in turbulent times, though its enduring cultural footprint remains tied more to zeitgeist reflection than transformative innovation.[82]
Long-term reception and influence
The New Abnormal earned the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards on March 14, 2021, representing The Strokes' first win in the category after three prior nominations and underscoring its recognition among industry peers despite the band's prior commercial inconsistencies.[5] This accolade followed an aggregate critical score of 77/100 on Metacritic, with reviewers praising its synthesis of the band's garage rock roots and 1980s new wave influences, though outlets like Pitchfork critiqued its occasional sluggishness at a 6.8/10 rating.[3] Retrospectively, as of 2021, the album maintained relevance amid global disruptions, with analyses noting its thematic prescience on societal malaise while proving resilient in fan discussions and streaming metrics.[83]In the years following release, the record solidified The Strokes' resurgence after a seven-year gap, facilitating renewed live performances and collaborative output from members like Julian Casablancas' side project The Voidz.[84] Critics such as those at Rolling Stone highlighted its enduring appeal as a bridge between nostalgia and evolution, positioning it as the band's strongest effort since Is This It (2001) through refined production by Rick Rubin that amplified tracks like "The Adults Are Talking."[18] However, broader musical influence remains niche, primarily reinforcing post-punk revival aesthetics in indie circles rather than spawning widespread emulation, as evidenced by its role in sustaining guitar-driven rock amid electronic dominance.[6]Long-term fan reception has elevated it to a consensus high point in the discography, with user aggregates on platforms like Album of the Year reflecting scores above 80/100 into 2025, often citing its replay value and lyrical introspection on aging and cultural stagnation.[85] While not transformative on the scale of the band's debut, its legacy lies in validating The Strokes' adaptability, contributing to their persistence as a reference for New York rock lineage without diluting core sonic identity.[51]