<strong>The National<br/> </strong>Trouble Will Find Me<br/> (4AD)**** "Song sung blue / everybody knows one," noted Neil Diamond, but this sixth album from Brooklyn's The National confirms that literate melancholia is the band's default setting. All credit to the frontman Matt Berninger, though: he remains an engaging old Eeyore, and a very different beast to the self-pitying lovelorn that critics traditionally lambast. There's an elegance and quiet confidence about <em>Trouble Will Find Me</em>, its arrangements sophisticated, yet subtle. Songs such as<em> I Should Live In Salt</em> and <em>Don't Swallow the Cap </em>have pleasingly durable melodies that take a few listens to bed-in, and even if the album's fine wordplay occasionally baffles – "I was teething on roses / I was in guns and noses," sings Berninger atop the Motorik groove of <em>Humiliation</em> – you have to admire its sustained war on cliché. The National recently earned their art-rock stripes by playing their song <em>Sorrow</em> at MoMA in New York City for six hours straight. A yawn-inducing experience for even the most ardent fan, surely, but <em>Trouble Will Find Me</em>, replete with the lurching piano standout <em>Pink Rabbits</em>, is a fine effort devoid of longueurs. <span class="s1"><strong><a href="mailto:artslife@thenational.ae">artslife@thenational.ae</a></strong></span> Follow us on <a href="https://www.facebook.com/thenationalArtsandLife">Facebook</a> for discussions, entertainment, reviews, wellness and news. Follow us