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Kiss Land

Kiss Land in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $12.59
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Kiss Land

Kiss Land in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $12.59
Loading Inventory...

Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Platinum sales, touring life, and radio presence -- the last of which was due more to guest spots on
Drake
's "Crew Love" and
Wiz Khalifa
's "Remember You" than his own singles -- granted
Abel Tesfaye
a fresh set of fraught experiences and anxieties. As he laments/boasts in the eight-minute slow-motion horror suite that is this album's title track, "I got a brand new place/I think I've seen it twice all year," and visits to his doctor have provided access to new ingredients for his indulgences. Indeed, this is a post-fame album. In "The Town,"
Tesfaye
apologizes to a local conquest for his absence and notes that he can supply her with diamond rings. The following "Adaptation," where he grieves about losing a potential long-term relationship to his career, illustrates his transient lifestyle as a new source for madness. Although the circumstances and locations are different, the antics, along with the mix of emotional trauma and arrogance, are often similar to what
depicted throughout his 2011 releases. Lyrics like "I can't stand talking to brand new girls/Only bitches down to fuck when you shower them with ones," also from "Kiss Land," carry a deeper sense of realism. Sonically, the tracks -- produced with a new cast that includes
DannyBoyStyles
and
DaHeala
-- are a little cleaner, yet they're all leaden, even when the pace picks up for the
Fox the Fox
-sampling "Wanderlust" and the overloaded "Belong to the World." The latter owes its industrial judder to
Portishead
's "Machine Gun" and is delivered like an anthem with
desperately emoting, "I'm not a fool, I just love that you're dead inside." For all its similarities to
's past work, along with his confession that "This ain't nothin' to relate to,"
Kiss Land
is more personal, more human, and will draw his fans closer to him. The slightly wider vocal range and additional expressiveness don't hurt his cause. ~ Andy Kellman
Platinum sales, touring life, and radio presence -- the last of which was due more to guest spots on
Drake
's "Crew Love" and
Wiz Khalifa
's "Remember You" than his own singles -- granted
Abel Tesfaye
a fresh set of fraught experiences and anxieties. As he laments/boasts in the eight-minute slow-motion horror suite that is this album's title track, "I got a brand new place/I think I've seen it twice all year," and visits to his doctor have provided access to new ingredients for his indulgences. Indeed, this is a post-fame album. In "The Town,"
Tesfaye
apologizes to a local conquest for his absence and notes that he can supply her with diamond rings. The following "Adaptation," where he grieves about losing a potential long-term relationship to his career, illustrates his transient lifestyle as a new source for madness. Although the circumstances and locations are different, the antics, along with the mix of emotional trauma and arrogance, are often similar to what
depicted throughout his 2011 releases. Lyrics like "I can't stand talking to brand new girls/Only bitches down to fuck when you shower them with ones," also from "Kiss Land," carry a deeper sense of realism. Sonically, the tracks -- produced with a new cast that includes
DannyBoyStyles
and
DaHeala
-- are a little cleaner, yet they're all leaden, even when the pace picks up for the
Fox the Fox
-sampling "Wanderlust" and the overloaded "Belong to the World." The latter owes its industrial judder to
Portishead
's "Machine Gun" and is delivered like an anthem with
desperately emoting, "I'm not a fool, I just love that you're dead inside." For all its similarities to
's past work, along with his confession that "This ain't nothin' to relate to,"
Kiss Land
is more personal, more human, and will draw his fans closer to him. The slightly wider vocal range and additional expressiveness don't hurt his cause. ~ Andy Kellman
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