Album Review: Hospitality - Trouble


Effortless pop tunes have always been the specialty of Brooklyn-based trio Hospitality, and with their most recent sophomore album Trouble, they once again showcase how simplistic, yet infectious their music truly can be. In the two years since their self-titled album debuted, it seems as though the band’s compositions have taken a modest drift into more somber pieces, however, they still maintain that lustrous electro-pop listenability.

Across the board, the band’s new 10-song collection is an experimental venture from the lulling wooze-soaked cloud “Nightingale” that introduces the album to the trance inducing acoustic centered jam “Call Me After” that closes Trouble out. Continuing in the guitar centric fashion of album closer “Call Me After” is the whimsy and highly contagious “Sunship,” which decidedly progresses the themes of vulnerability in a fine-spun approach. The group’s experimental nature on their sophomore album can best be seen on “Last Words” since it highlights one of the biggest jumps into electronic music they have so far taken. Intertwining the omnipresent pulsing beats and Papini’s ambitious vocal style seem to have worked out in Hospitality’s favor for this particular pursuit.

“I Miss Your Bones” doesn’t beat around the bush in its stark discussion of seclusion or alienation while dually switching up the band’s lyrical ingenious by trying out deeper metaphors like “All the stars will twinkle in the mist of the sea. The black on me will ever seem lost like abyss. And maybe after, when I return I get what I miss.” Their endearing lyrical ambiguity coupled with blazing basslines and garage-rock guitar plucks sell the single’s conviction making it the clear standout of the album. To say nothing of lead singer Amber Papini’s swiveling vocal techniques and control on these tracks would merely downplay her significances in making each song sound unique to the whole Hospitality atmosphere.

As with the natural progression of any band Hospitality is still discovering and continually enhancing their sound. Trouble is an extension of their growth into more experimental sounds and to be honest they do it remarkably well. For the most part their album is a league above the last, which is often a daunting task for artists to manage in today’s music scene. 

Grade: B




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