Passion Pit
Kindred


4.5
superb

Review

by Kirk Bowman STAFF
June 27th, 2015 | 17 replies


Release Date: 2015 | Tracklist

Review Summary: "All I want are hooks to hang your flowers on"

Passion Pit, the semi-one-man-project of Michael Angelakos, started off with the Chunk Of Change EP. This was the era of a thousand Myspace success stories, and synthpop was just coming into vogue. As such, the EP, particularly “Sleepyhead,” surged into popularity, and the polished (if slightly stale) Manners was released the next year. In the following three years, the blog era descended in popularity significantly. When the band (which had gained members at this point) announced a new album in 2012, Gossamer wasn’t what people expected. Standout singles “I’ll Be Alright” and “Take A Walk” sounded more pop than anything put out so far, and many fans were disappointed. Another three years later (don’t expect a new album until 2018), Kindred is announced, as well as the band’s return to a one-man project. This time, it’s even more radio-friendly than ever before. You can easily pump your fist to “Until We Can’t (Let’s Go),” and Michael uses auto-tune (the filthiest of all “real music” betrayals) on the finale. The easiest reaction to hearing this, and the ridiculously happy pop that the album embodies, is to assume that Passion Pit have sold out and created a completely cheesy letdown, but that’s not at all true. It’s not a crazed detour into something worse - it’s a hard-earned victory lap, more pointed and direct than ever before.

On Kindred, Angelakos finally completely embraces the pop he’s been circling since Passion Pit started, and it’s exactly what we needed. Everything he’s released has been reliant on pop ideas and styles. (A track off Chunk Of Change sampled “Girls Just Want To Have Fun,” one of the cheesiest, catchiest pop songs ever written.) It’s just that now he's finally honest about its identity. No more pseudo-alternative disguises. Just like Gossamer saw Michael shed his lyrical subtlety in exchange for complete, intensely affecting emotional impact, Kindred sheds all layers of ex-blog-era credibility in favor of a complete, intensely accessible, classic simplicity. The key word there is “classic.” Listening to SPIRITS I, one of two playlists Angelakos curated on Spotify prior to Kindred’s release, we hear influences like The Isley Brothers and Barbra Streisand, songwriting geniuses, and nothing if not pop artists. Making an album like the classic pop greats is clearly a priority: note the (relatively) short 10-track, 36-minute run time, the LP-like Columbia logo on the album art, and the dramatic, almost lo-fi nature of “Ten Feet Tall.” Despite the current obsession with retro, actual classic pop songwriting and album structure is rare, so it sounds genuinely fresh. Although it’s nice, like many older pop albums, it gets grating at times. Some songs stretch their hooks too far and don’t give full credit to their often interesting verses, and the transition from the speed of “My Brother Taught Me How To Swim” to “Ten Feet Tall” is very jarring. Thankfully, there are more influences than just classic pop, which SPIRITS II shows off. These cuts are diverse and often unexpected, whether it be the Gossamer-esque emotion of “No, No” and “Song Cry” (clear on the emotional musical peak of the album, “Dancing On The Grave”), the bubbly melody of “Double Bed” and “Rice Rain” (most obvious on “Where The Sky Hangs” and “Looks Like Rain”), and even the frenetic, intense energy of “Lights” and “Unrequited Love” (manifested in the fist-pumping anthems “Lifted Up (1985)” and “Until We Can’t”).The point I’m trying to make is that Kindred isn’t just another generic synthpop artist putting out an EDM album, regardless of how it might appear on first glance. This is, for the most part, layered, complex music.

Arguably, emotion is more important than depth. Gossamer, despite its controversially mainstream sound, gained Passion Pit numerous fans (including yours truly) because it’s such a raw, emotional confession. Kindred continues that theme, to an extent. Most of these Gossamer fans probably wish there was a bit more heartbreak and a little less optimism. Sometimes we need happy music, but the biggest problems directly faced here are unwanted publicity and domestic frustration, a far cry from the substance abuse and mental health of yesteralbum. But there is a beauty to this simple hope. Michael thanks his wife, recognizing how much his problems have hurt her (“I took your hands and pulled you down”). He’s happier now (“Until We Can’t” couldn’t have fit on any of his other releases), but he still understands just how much he’s overcome, and his need for continual help (“We’re dancing on the grave of the nights we couldn’t sleep...someone hold me as I turn the night away”). He even discusses religion’s impact on his life, in the blatantly Christian “My Brother Taught Me How To Swim.” The common theme, is humility, recognition, gratitude and hope. Michael sees things from a broader perspective for the first time - he and his music are all the better for it.

We all know why albums like this get plenty of hate. Kindred isn’t as sad (read: “real”) as Gossamer, and it’s far more accessible (read: “sellout”) than Manners. But does it really deserve it? I say no. If Manners was an experimental flatland wander, and Gossamer a grueling uphill trek glimmered with hope, then Kindred is the thrilling downhill ride - exciting, short, and beautifully concise. If the hard times deserve a soundtrack, the good times do too. One of Michael’s first (and best) songs, “Better Things,” sang fervently of hope for a better future. Those times have finally arrived for him, and if that doesn’t deserve passion, I don’t know what does.



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user ratings (149)
2.7
average
other reviews of this album
RivalSkoomaDealer (3)
Kindred certainly sounds like Passion Pit but it lacks the ingredients necessary to stay in rotation...

Goldfinch13 (2.5)
Rain, rain, go away...



Comments:Add a Comment 
granitenotebook
Staff Reviewer
June 27th 2015


1271 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

critique of any kind is always and especially welcome

idontcareaboutthis
June 27th 2015


952 Comments


this review does not sit well with me. i'm not sure it really backs up the 4.5, and the content seems mostly like unrelated filler. won't neg but this i wouldn't say this is a good review either

granitenotebook
Staff Reviewer
June 27th 2015


1271 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I'll accept that. anything in particular you think I could have touched on that would have helped justify my rating?

idontcareaboutthis
June 27th 2015


952 Comments


well it seems the entire basis for your argument was that the world needs optimistic, accessible pop albums. you then compare kindred to manners and gossamer, which is fine, but you let that take up basically the entire review. if anything, this reads almost like a defense of michael's pull to happy, pop music. you said the music was diverse in spots and wore its influnces on its sleeves in others, so the question remains: is the music actually good?

granitenotebook
Staff Reviewer
June 27th 2015


1271 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I wrote this review sort of as a defense to all the people saying that it was a huge step down compared to the others. I guess I could have spent more time focusing on praising good points instead of explaining it. I think I did a little, but not as much as I could/should have (ironically, this is one of my main complaints w/other reviews). thanks, I appreciate it, will keep in mind next time.

NorthernSkylark
June 27th 2015


12134 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

radios must be banging this album hard

DaveyBoy
Emeritus
June 27th 2015


22500 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Good stuff mc. Like you, I'm not as down on this album as most.



As for the review itself, there's a shell of a really awesome one here and we've all fallen foul to labouring a point in the past. I actually think your main point is decent enough, but along the lines of what idcat stated, it should only be used in the intro & conclusion to the review.



That 2nd paragraph is way too long. Split it in 2 after "... if not pop artists". Even then, I'd try to condense the new opening 2 paragraphs into 1 (easier said than done). Then, even the final 2 paragraphs could be condensed into one, since you discuss pretty much the same point in both. That would leave 3 better-sized paragraphs: (1) intro, (2) song discussion (left as is), (3) conclusion.



So yeah, just continuously edit where points are labored or repeated & you'll see a marked improvement in the readability of your reviews from now on.

nickwardmusic
June 27th 2015


16 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

Great review man. Like you said in points during your review, the first glimpses I heard from this album made me label it as a blatant sell out. I was initially pretty down on it, but it took time like you said, to realize how this fits into the trifecta that is now Passion Pit's collection of LP's. It needed to come full circle and this is a fitting conclusion. Though I liked Gossamer most of all for its raw emotional power, Kindred is easily tied with Manners for second.

DoofusWainwright
June 28th 2015


19991 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

this was awful, thanks for reminding me

Pangea
June 28th 2015


10508 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

i should relisten soon. kinda feel like i've been to harsh on this

silentstar
June 28th 2015


2528 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

wow the rating for this dropped to a 2.8 that's low

i would think it should be a 3.2-ish

apokolypz
June 28th 2015


491 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

Great review pos'd. Personally I cannot stand this album. Lifted Up is okay, but I sat down to the whole album and it was beyond annoying, the mixing is extremely high pitched on this, just on a high note (not in a good way) the entire time. Extremely sugary with no edge or kick.

granitenotebook
Staff Reviewer
June 30th 2015


1271 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

@NorthernSkylark nah I haven't heard a PP song on the radio since "Take A Walk." too sparkly for the White Stripes/Oasis/Arctic Monkeys style alt. stations, too wierd for the pop stations.



@DaveyBoy hey thanks so much. seriously appreciate the input, I'll definitely be looking at this the next time I write a review.



@nickwardmusic appreciate it, thanks!



@Pangea I loved (as in 5) Gossamer. if you like it, you'll like this. (if not, you probably won't) probably not as much, but it has a very similar feel, and the emotion definitely comes out on later listens. huge grower.



@silentstar seriously, it should be a 3+. it's really not that much worse than Manners or Gossamer. sputnik hates happy albums though



@apokolypz thanks, appreciated. I can understand that. I love sugary though so that's probably a big reason I liked this so much

zakalwe
June 30th 2015


38825 Comments

Album Rating: 1.0

This album is actually frowned upon in the 9th circle of hell as being total shit

granitenotebook
Staff Reviewer
June 30th 2015


1271 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

very much so

Pangea
June 30th 2015


10508 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

They very much did

silentstar
June 30th 2015


2528 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

okay



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