The Lumineers have told their own story in III, a 10-track concept album composed of three chapters that follows the fictitious Sparks family.
The tale is grounded. While the story follows the destructive path of addiction as it enters the life of matriarch Gloria in Chapter I, the struggle faced by the family is one recognisable to anyone who's had a loved one deal with addiction or has faced it themselves.
It's also a narrative that writers Wesley Schultz and Jeremiah Fraites know intimately. Schultz has a homeless relative who has battled mental illness and addiction and Fraites' brother passed away after a heroin overdose.
The Lumineers use searing imagery, painting a picture with each song. This picture — the life of Gloria, her son Jimmy and her grandson, Junior — is even further illuminated by the heartbreaking short film that accompanies the record.
All in all, the breadth of the project is remarkable. The stunning visual vignettes bring lines to life, such as when Schultz sings, "A little boy was born in February / You couldn't sober up to hold a baby" and you watch Gloria fall, clutching her wine glass, with the baby playing on the floor close by.