Album Reviews

Tristan Clopet – Purple EP

 

 

Singer/songwriter Tristan Clopet has delivered a set of funk-laden, alternative cuts on his sophomore EP, Purple.

The long-lost cousin to the Red Hot Chili Peppers or the louder uncle to Jason Mraz or the more inventive brother to Jack Johnson; Clopet’s work is more sonically diverse than all three of those comparisons, and he nearly pulls all of their spirits together and channels them into a unique outing.  Purple is chilled out, rollicking and intimate all at the same time—but that’s not necessarily a balanced meal.

Album opener, “Proximity Bomb” is indicative of Californication-era Anthony Keidis and delivers a pretty wicked bass crunch.  “So Alive” is Top-40 radio fodder any 16 year-old can fall in lust with.   “Superficiality is a Sin” has a groove, but Clopet’s pseudo-rapped verses are only luke-warm.  “Ethereal Evidence” also invokes the RHCP spirit, perhaps a bit too much.  “Love and a Question” is a gentle, enjoyable ballad and “Black Panther Party” is the Keidis bookend to the album opener.

Clopet seems to be caught between pop-rock balladry and trying to revive the 90’s alt-funk.  He’d do well to choose one or the other, as the sonic balance has yet to be struck.  Just because he’s good at both, doesn’t mean he should indulge in cooperation.

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