Refreshed and uplifted. Those are two things that the best pop records leave you feeling, and that's definitely the end result of listening to "Manners," the debut album from Passion Pit.
Ecstatic is the key word here as melodies arrive in a sugar rush; lyrics spill out in long, ornate lines full of bright imagery; and Michael Angelakos's rough-hewn falsetto vocals practically burst at the seams as he attempts to get all his points across at once.
A major factor in the album's success is the group's exuberant, boundary-blind approach. While synth-pop is the overriding genre here, the whizzering keys and dance beats of songs like "Moth's Wings" and "Let Your Love Grow Tall" coexist peacefully with acoustic guitars and classic pop harmonies from the Beatles/Beach Boys playbook. Beats loop and stutter in a contemporary chop-and-screw stew, but no matter how mechanized a groove may be - on the melancholic "Swimming in the Flood," for instance - a soulful human heart beats through.