To anyone familiar with his music, it's obvious that
Ariel Pink is weird, but it bears repeating:
Ariel Pink is really weird. It's also not a surprise that he's a (self-professed) "nympho" either, but he sheds more light on that throughout
Mature Themes, which is both his most accomplished album and some of his most twistedly immature music. As on
Before Today, the album's sound is just a shade clearer than what came before it, and his backing band
Haunted Graffiti's tight musicianship provides the perfect foil for
Pink's stream-of-consciousness sprawl. But while
Mature Themes' conceptual glue makes it more cohesive than all of his previous work put together, glorious randomness abounds: not many artists would interrupt a song to order food at a drive-thru, as
Pink does on the rhapsodic "Schnitzel Boogie," or write a song about being bros with a legendary seer, as he does on "Nostradamus and Me," one of his more ecstatically drifting pieces of chillwave. As always,
Pink's lyrics are densely knotted with wordplay and innuendo; his fondness for sound effects approaches
Spike Jones levels, and his fondness for dropping violent imagery into his songs makes them all the more jarring and surreal, as on "Is This the Best Spot," where G-spots and H-bombs go hand in hand. Yet all of this weirdness feels like it has more of a point on
Mature Themes than it has on his previous albums: sex and love can be strange and complicated. "Pink Slime" takes on a whole new meaning in
Pink's hands, and amidst its silliness, "Symphony of the Nymph" tackles gender roles and sexual stereotypes; despite the song's bragging, when
Pink sings "I'm just a rock n' rolla from Beverly Hills!," there's more than a hint of strain in his voice. And even if a lot of the album's sexual imagery seems adolescent,
Pink turns it on its head with the album's soft rock title track, which addresses the teenage ideal of a girl and boy in love (along with his wish to be taller). He goes deeper into that fantasy with the jingle-jangle single "Only in My Dreams," which is is sweetly creepy and full of bubblegum yearning like a vintage AM radio hit, and with the fantastic album closer "Baby," a cover of
Donnie & Joe Emerson's 1979 song (and 21st century mixtape favorite) that features
Dam-Funk helping
Pink complete the smooth loverman persona. It's one of the few times where
Mature Themes is actually sexy as well as sexual, and the way
Pink disappears into the song may be his biggest mind-f*ck yet. Even his surprises end up being perfectly
Ariel Pink things to do in retrospect, and with this album, he's mastered being more superficially accessible yet ultimately more cryptic.
Mature Themes just reveals more levels with more listening; as
Pink himself sings on the psych oddity "Early Birds of Babylon," "hey, how does he do that?" ~ Heather Phares