When in 2011 LCD Soundsystem announced they are separated forever, it made it look like a really important band - a farewell concert, a documentary, a vinyl box set of their albums, and a good financial record of the venture. Six years later, however, they return and it seems no one is angry that they have a little gone wrong with the finality of their separation. Once David Bowie himself has pushed them to join, as James Murphy shares in an interview, he dares to complain, and he has nothing to do with it. The American Dream is like a rebirth, but marked by many extremes: friendship, love, the fall of heroes and a more special phantom - the American Dream. Serious topics for a project that begins as a joke. At the same time, it is so typical of Murphy, known for its effect on post-punk and art-rock sound, but in sync with the bubbling synthesizers that pierce against the backgrounds of texts disturbed by the superficial nature of life. It is worth listening if you love not only to listen to, but to look for lyrical or musical references - in this case to great men like Lou Reed, Leonard Cohen, Alan Vega and Bowie - all people who died in the years since the last recording of LCD Soundsystem.