The Top 100 Albums of the 2000s (90-81)
Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010
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90. Passion Pit Manners (2009)
The older I get and the more focused I am on the realities of life (work, kids, marriage, etc.), the less I care about the fickle nature of the Internet backlash or the cool capital of social currency. I no longer have time to worry about which bands I should be snubbing and which bands I should be championing. All I can rely on are my two ears and a few of my other parts for what’s good and what’s not. That’s why I have yet to turn my nose up on Passion Pit. A Seattle weekly recently described Passion Pit as a band enjoying the spoils of success that belonged to Cut Copy. By my ears (and heart and ass and crotch), Cut Copy has nothing on Passion Pit’s giddy and unabashed chipmunk-soul electro pop (neither do MGMT, Justice, Hot Chip or the Junior Boys for that matter). Maybe it’s my more rockist leanings that lead me to appreciate only the least subtle corners of electronic music, but Manners has an “It” factor that no other artists of a similar ilk have. It could be the joyous rainbow explosion that is album opener “Make Light” or the way that “Moth’s Wings” runs laps around Arcade Fire. Or maybe it’s the take-it-to-the-next-level drum shots that bring “Little Secrets” out of its first chorus or the call-and-response kids choir chorus on “The Reeling.” Or maybe it’s the pretty “Ooh woo oohs” of “Folds In Your Hands” or the over the top lead line that sets “Eyes In Candles” in motion. Or maybe it’s just “Sleepyhead.” Who knows? The highlights are plentiful; the music is fun, fresh and beautiful; and my ears, heart, ass and crotch are always happy to greet Passion Pit. Truth is, when Manners is playing, it becomes my favorite thing ever.
“The Reeling”