Fits - All Belief Is Paradise (2017)
Artist: Fits
Title: All Belief Is Paradise
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Father/Daughter Records
Genre: Alternative Rock, Power Pop
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 20:18 min
Total Size: 132 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: All Belief Is Paradise
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Father/Daughter Records
Genre: Alternative Rock, Power Pop
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 20:18 min
Total Size: 132 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Ice Cream on a Nice Day 01:16 video
02. Running Out 01:13
03. Admission Day 01:37
04. The Ground 02:03
05. Fulfilling 01:03
06. Drop Thistle 02:29
07. Hot Topic 01:29
08. Superdead 01:52
09. Mango 00:58
10. How Did U 01:48
11. All The Time 01:57
12. The Levers 02:32
After years of playing bass in multiple bands across the Brooklyn music scene, Nicholas Cummins is releasing All Belief is Paradise, the debut full-length for their first songwriting effort, Fits. Songs that began as vocal and bass loops recorded to voice memo as a way for Cummins to express their own desires and songwriting designs, have evolved into effusive power-pop songs with the help of close pals drummer Brian Orante, and later Joe Galarraga (Big Ups) on guitar and Emma Witmer (gobbinjr) on bass. All Belief is Paradise, named after a line in a Lisa Robertson’s The Weather, honors the spirit of the early material (sometimes directly pulling in bits of early voice memo demos) while unveiling Fits’ evolution into a fully formed band capable of being thoughtful and bratty, accessible and weird, and tackling it all with confidence, humor, and great hooks.
When their mother died three years ago, Cummins was left reevaluating the degree to which they had been holding back various identities and emotions in order to protect her. Fits was born as a way of claiming that space. The phrase “I want” is hyper-prevalent throughout the album — while writing songs for the album Cummins would often start by yelling “I want—” and going from there. Much of the record is about grief, and “returning to a busted up fucked up childhood after falling out of it and stabilizing yourself on your own,” says Cummins. “The Ground” and “Drop Thistle” were written after visiting the site of their old childhood home in New Freedom, Pennsylvania (profiled as “Trump County” in PA Magazine). Still other songs are drawn from lighter fare: ghosting, a relationship that was already “dead” and is now “Superdead.” Even the darker content is often folded into effusive material, buoyed by yelps, shreds, and cathartic breakdowns.
Fits is undeniably shaped by band members’ experiences playing Brooklyn DIY spaces such as Shea Stadium and Silent Barn. (For one, Cummins first decided to take the Fits project seriously after playing the demos through a giant traveling Swedish log parked in the Silent Barn yard.) For another, songs are quick, loud, and rarely content with sticking to any one style, often holding for meditative intervals before launching into full-throttle caffeinated pop. The therapeutic drive behind the songs and the genuine fun of the group’s dynamic make Paradise a rewarding listen and Fits a band that can more than hold its own.
When their mother died three years ago, Cummins was left reevaluating the degree to which they had been holding back various identities and emotions in order to protect her. Fits was born as a way of claiming that space. The phrase “I want” is hyper-prevalent throughout the album — while writing songs for the album Cummins would often start by yelling “I want—” and going from there. Much of the record is about grief, and “returning to a busted up fucked up childhood after falling out of it and stabilizing yourself on your own,” says Cummins. “The Ground” and “Drop Thistle” were written after visiting the site of their old childhood home in New Freedom, Pennsylvania (profiled as “Trump County” in PA Magazine). Still other songs are drawn from lighter fare: ghosting, a relationship that was already “dead” and is now “Superdead.” Even the darker content is often folded into effusive material, buoyed by yelps, shreds, and cathartic breakdowns.
Fits is undeniably shaped by band members’ experiences playing Brooklyn DIY spaces such as Shea Stadium and Silent Barn. (For one, Cummins first decided to take the Fits project seriously after playing the demos through a giant traveling Swedish log parked in the Silent Barn yard.) For another, songs are quick, loud, and rarely content with sticking to any one style, often holding for meditative intervals before launching into full-throttle caffeinated pop. The therapeutic drive behind the songs and the genuine fun of the group’s dynamic make Paradise a rewarding listen and Fits a band that can more than hold its own.