DIIV’s Deceiver is a Pummeling Glimpse into the Reality of Recovery
The Brooklyn shoegazers have expanded both their sound and mission on their third LP

It’s easy to oversimplify the path that recovering addicts must take toward rehabilitation. From the outside, the objective is simple: Stay clean long enough and the monkey on your back eventually hops off. But the reality is that breaking the cycle of addiction is a Sisyphean endeavor that keeps those undergoing it in an eternal state of recovery—only those on the inside can fully understand its tribulations.
Zachary Cole Smith—the central voice behind DIIV—has long been on the inside of addiction. After the group released their sophomore album, Is the Is Are, Cole entered a long-haul inpatient treatment for heroin addiction, a struggle that became public in 2013 when he and his then-girlfriend Sky Ferreira were busted for possession. Cole’s experiences in rehab became the inspiration for the group’s latest record, Deceiver, and while the album displays the group’s darkest sound yet, it also ends up being their most earnest.
While the tracks across Is the Is Are presented Cole’s recovery in a naïve, perceived triumph over addiction, he knows better than to trivialize his struggles on Deceiver. Instead of another blissful smattering of lo-fi shoegaze, the songs on this record are immense—both sonically and thematically. The record’s opener, “Horsehead,” immediately thrusts the listener into a swirl of strumming, overdriven guitars revolving around Cole’s ghostly vocals as he sings, “I want to breathe in / And never breathe back out.”
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