Perfume Genius: Glory 12"
Coming March 28: 'Glory,' the new album from Perfume Genius. 'Glory' has a pristine surface and a tender, roiling underside. Mike Hadreasā seventh album is muscular, filled out by his partner in life and songcraft Alan Wyffels and longtime producer Blake Mills alongside the fiercest band Perfume Genius has ever assembled: guitarists Meg Duffy and Greg Uhlmann, drummers Tim Carr and Jim Keltner, and bassist Pat Kelly. These players marshall their power, and Hadreas his macabre imaginings and gallows humor, to humane ends. Perfume Genius pries open a mildewed den full of alienation, longing and desire and lets it bask in the sunlight.
The recordās central conflict, says Hadreas, is the āback and forth between internal and external.ā Promoting his string of beloved, increasingly ambitious albums during the past decade and a halfātouring the world, dwelling in the public eyeāclashed with his innate impulse toward isolation. For 'Glory,' he discovered a new songwriting process because he welcomed the dynamics of a group, leaving room in his compositions for his friends to flesh out the arrangements. As Hadreas says: āIām more engaged with the band and the audience. Iām still on some wild tear, but thereās more access and itās more collaborative, in a way that makes it better, but also scaryābecause it feels more vulnerable.ā ⦠- Daniel Felsenthal
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Perfume Genius: Glory 12"
Perfume Genius: Glory 12"
Coming March 28: 'Glory,' the new album from Perfume Genius. 'Glory' has a pristine surface and a tender, roiling underside. Mike Hadreasā seventh album is muscular, filled out by his partner in life and songcraft Alan Wyffels and longtime producer Blake Mills alongside the fiercest band Perfume Genius has ever assembled: guitarists Meg Duffy and Greg Uhlmann, drummers Tim Carr and Jim Keltner, and bassist Pat Kelly. These players marshall their power, and Hadreas his macabre imaginings and gallows humor, to humane ends. Perfume Genius pries open a mildewed den full of alienation, longing and desire and lets it bask in the sunlight.
The recordās central conflict, says Hadreas, is the āback and forth between internal and external.ā Promoting his string of beloved, increasingly ambitious albums during the past decade and a halfātouring the world, dwelling in the public eyeāclashed with his innate impulse toward isolation. For 'Glory,' he discovered a new songwriting process because he welcomed the dynamics of a group, leaving room in his compositions for his friends to flesh out the arrangements. As Hadreas says: āIām more engaged with the band and the audience. Iām still on some wild tear, but thereās more access and itās more collaborative, in a way that makes it better, but also scaryābecause it feels more vulnerable.ā ⦠- Daniel Felsenthal
Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
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Description
Coming March 28: 'Glory,' the new album from Perfume Genius. 'Glory' has a pristine surface and a tender, roiling underside. Mike Hadreasā seventh album is muscular, filled out by his partner in life and songcraft Alan Wyffels and longtime producer Blake Mills alongside the fiercest band Perfume Genius has ever assembled: guitarists Meg Duffy and Greg Uhlmann, drummers Tim Carr and Jim Keltner, and bassist Pat Kelly. These players marshall their power, and Hadreas his macabre imaginings and gallows humor, to humane ends. Perfume Genius pries open a mildewed den full of alienation, longing and desire and lets it bask in the sunlight.
The recordās central conflict, says Hadreas, is the āback and forth between internal and external.ā Promoting his string of beloved, increasingly ambitious albums during the past decade and a halfātouring the world, dwelling in the public eyeāclashed with his innate impulse toward isolation. For 'Glory,' he discovered a new songwriting process because he welcomed the dynamics of a group, leaving room in his compositions for his friends to flesh out the arrangements. As Hadreas says: āIām more engaged with the band and the audience. Iām still on some wild tear, but thereās more access and itās more collaborative, in a way that makes it better, but also scaryābecause it feels more vulnerable.ā ⦠- Daniel Felsenthal












