Destination Failure isn’t what anyone would call a typical summer album. The third record from Chicago-based pop-punk band The Smoking Popes is, in places, lighthearted—it even includes a cover of “Pure Imagination” from Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory, which lends a dreamy, whimsical vibe to the whole thing—but there’s something about it that feels decidedly melancholic. The record label hated it so much they almost didn’t release it, and after it flopped financially, the band took a seven-year hiatus. Even the lead single, “Let’s Hear It For Love,” isn’t as cheery as the name implies.I’ve always struggled to enjoy the warmer months; I could never relate to the happy, carefree vibes that typically signify summer. I want to have those blissful summer feelings and memories, but I don’t; the best I can do is acknowledge that summer just never worked out right for me, that the classic depiction of the season just isn’t what I experience. I think that’s why The Smoking Popes have always felt like a warm-weather band to me: singer/guitarist Josh Caterer’s crooning vocals are easy to get lost in, but they hide some pretty wistful lyrics. “Megan,” one of the Popes’ most beloved songs, opens with a line so romantic it’ll make you melt: “Butter on a summer’s day when she’s around.” And yet, the lyrics as a whole are pretty devastating. Destination Failure is beautiful, and it’s sad, and that dichotomy is exactly what the weather getting warmer feels like to me. [Jen Lennon]