With “Sweater Weather,” the first single off the Neighbourhood’s 2013 debut album “I Love You,” the Southern California quintet pulled off the rock ‘n’ roll equivalent of a rookie baseball player hitting a grand slam his first time at the plate in the big leagues.
The moody single spent 11 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Alternative charts, reached No. 14 on the Billboard 100, and firmly established the group as a buzz band overnight. Nothing like making a good first impression, but then the record company wants another single like that one, and the pressure builds, and what if the next record doesn’t have a hit, and — well, you get the picture.
“I think in the beginning, trying to live up to that song was more on our minds,” says drummer Brandon Alexander Fried a week or so before the Neighbourhood headline the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Sept. 18. “What’s most important is the listeners it gave us. All our crazy fans.
“That song opened that world up to them, and just gave us a platform to do what we want to do,” he says. “Now we have enough fans that anyone could ever want. We’re trying to get new fans but also give people who’ve been with us since Day 1 everything they want.”
The Neighbourhood is touring behind its third studio full-length album, a self-titled record that Fried says came together with greater ease than 2015’s sophomore release “Wiped Out!”
“The second album was a little more stressful, says Fried who went to high school in Newbury Park with singer Jesse Rutherford. Guitarists Zachary Abels and Jeremiah Freedman and bassist Michael Margott went to school in Simi Valley, he adds. “We were all living in a house in Malibu during the making of ‘Wipe Out!’ and that was a lot of fun but it ended up being stressful.
“But this one, we went in with an open mind,” Fried says. “It’s the third album and you feel like you have a little more freedom. We went in with a lot more demos that we were making at home rather than an empty slate like we did with the second record.
“We kind of went into the studio for a year and started pumping out songs, whether they were going to be on the record or not.”
This record has a bit of a vintage ’80s New Wave sound in places, especially in its use of synthesizers, a reflection of the revival of that scene at the time the Neighbourhood was recording its songs, Fried says.
“At the time we started making the album I think in ’80s revival things were at the front of pop culture,” he says. “Everybody was watching ‘Stranger Things,’ listening to bands like New Order or the Cure or anything like that.”
Many of the demos were written and recorded on keyboards instead of guitars as in the past, and producer Lars Stalfors had “a crazy collection of stuff to mess around with,” Fried says.
The Neighbourhood put together the track listing for this album as a sort of best-of culled from the EPs the band released before and after the full-length. It’s a way, Fried says, to get more music out to fans and also spread interest out for longer than the normal lifespan of an album.
“The ‘Hard’ EP I think we kind of chose more classic-sounding Neighbourhood songs, more hip-hop influences, stuff you expect to hear when you pick up the Neighbourhood’s new album,” he says. “Then on ‘To Imagine,’ we started getting more into the ’80s synths, electronic drums, arpeggiators.
“The album is sort of a hybrid of the two, classic-sounding songs and more forward-pushing,” Fried says. And soon, another EP will swing back toward the hip-hop influences with features from rappers the band likes, he adds.
At the Greek, the Neighbourhood plans on playing one of its longer sets for the hometown crowd, reaching all the way back to “I’m Sorry …” its 2012 debut EP and possibly including something from the still-to-be-released new EP, Fried says.
“We’re hitting all the stops,” he says. “Probably do certain songs that we haven’t played in a while. I think it’s going to be really sick.”
The Neighbourhood
Where: Greek Theatre, 2700 N. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles
When: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 18
Tickets: $29.50-$49.50 plus fees
Information: Thenbhd.com or LAGreektheatre.com