Racing Mount Pleasant (album)

Last updated

Racing Mount Pleasant
Racing Mount Pleasant album cover.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 15, 2025 (2025-08-15)
Genre
Length57:21
Label R&R
Racing Mount Pleasant chronology
Grip Your Fist, I'm Heaven Bound
(2022)
Racing Mount Pleasant
(2025)
Singles from Racing Mount Pleasant
  1. "Call It Easy"
    Released: April 9, 2025
  2. "Racing Mount Pleasant"
    Released: May 9, 2025
  3. "Your New Place"
    Released: July 11, 2025

Racing Mount Pleasant is the self-titled second [a] album by American indie band Racing Mount Pleasant. Following on from their 2022 album Grip Your Fist, I'm Heaven Bound, it was released on August 15, 2025 on the record label R&R, and was preceded by three singles. It received generally positive reviews from critics, who frequently compared it to the work of Black Country, New Road, Arcade Fire, and Bon Iver.

Contents

Background and release

Racing Mount Pleasant formed under the name Kingfisher in 2019 at the University of Michigan; [4] in November 2022, they released their debut album Grip Your Fist, I'm Heaven Bound. [5] On April 9, 2025, they changed their name to Racing Mount Pleasant, coinciding with the release of the single "Call It Easy". [6] On May 9, they released a second single, the self-titled "Racing Mount Pleasant"; [7] it was written before the band's name change. [3] They also announced that they would be releasing an album on the record label R&R. [7] The single "Your New Place" was released on July 11, accompanied by the announcement that Racing Mount Pleasant would be released on August 15. [8]

Style and composition

Critics disagree on the genre of Racing Mount Pleasant. It has been described as big band, [3] folk rock, [3] indie rock, [9] baroque pop, [10] and a mix of post-rock and Midwest emo. [4] [1] It has frequently been compared to Black Country, New Road [1] [10] [9] and Arcade Fire, [4] [1] [9] as well as Explosions In The Sky [4] and Bon Iver. [10] [3] [1] The album's tracks were written over the course of the band's entire existence; some weren't on Grip Your Fist simply because they hadn't been recorded at the time of that album's release. [3] Songs were composed by repeating sections many times until a natural transition to another section manifested. [3]

Racing Mount Pleasant were inspired by memories and looking back on the band's history while composing Racing Mount Pleasant, creating what Stereogum describes as a "miniverse". [3] There are references to other songs throughout the lyrics, instrumentals, and song titles; [3] [1] for example, the melody of "Your New Place" is repeated on the closing track, "Your Old Place". [1] The album was recorded in at least six different spaces, such as the attic of a house that some of the band members lived in, as well as in a church. [3]

Reception

Racing Mount Pleasant received generally positive reviews from critics. In a review for The New Yorker , Hanif Abdurraqib drew comparisons between the album and the poem "Katy" by Frank O'Hara, stating that the band had become "quieter and also less silent" since their debut (a reference to the fifth line of "Katy"). [4] Abdurraqib did not feel like he had learnt anything by listening to the album, as many of the themes were "unspectacular", but felt "delighted by the experience nonetheless". [4] David Renshaw of The Fader praised the album's "grand crescendos fit for cavernous arenas", describing "Your New Place" as "like a garage rock band swapping the dive bar for an orchestra pit". [9] In her interview article of the band for Stereogum , Margaret Farrell applauded the album's ability to evoke memories of the past, stating that "these songs move like memory: animated, all-encompassing, unpredictable". [3] Ian Cohen's review for Pitchfork was much more mixed; he praised the "panoramic sweep of post-rock" on "Your New Place", but disliked that the album was too similar to bands such as Arcade Fire, Bon Iver, and Black Country, New Road, stating "it sounds like a group working hard to make a cathartic, cleansing instant classic of [an album], but one drawn from memory". [1] Cohen also believed that songs such as "You" and "Call It Easy" didn't have a compelling narrator, describing them as "glacial". However, he concluded that "bands and albums of this nature don't come around all that often". [1]

Track listing

All lyrics are written by Sam DuBose. [11]

No.TitleLength
1."Your New Place"7:32
2."Tenspeed (Shallows)"3:51
3."Heavy Red"1:30
4."Emily"5:55
5."Seminary"4:56
6."You"4:07
7."You Pt. 2"4:07
8."Racing Mount Pleasant"5:15
9."Call It Easy"7:00
10."Outlast"5:01
11."34th Floor"1:31
12."Seyburn"2:12
13."Your Old Place"4:33
Total length:57:30

Personnel

Adapted from Bandcamp. [11]

Racing Mount Pleasant

Additional musicians

Technical personnel

Notes

  1. Some sources describe Racing Mount Pleasant as their debut album, due to the band changing their name; [1] [2] they released one album under the name Kingfisher. [3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Cohen, Ian (August 19, 2025). "Racing Mount Pleasant: Racing Mount Pleasant". Pitchfork. Retrieved October 1, 2025.
  2. Porter, Christopher (August 15, 2025). "Friday Five: Racing Mount Pleasant, TV Blackout, Fading Sun, Horse Bomb, racer-nelson.exe". Arts Around Ann Arbor. Retrieved October 1, 2025.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Farrell, Margaret (August 15, 2025). "Band To Watch: Racing Mount Pleasant". Stereogum. Retrieved August 15, 2025.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Abdurraqib, Hanif (August 27, 2025). "Racing Mount Pleasant Makes Quiet Emotions Sound Grand" . The New Yorker. Archived from the original on August 27, 2025. Retrieved October 1, 2025.
  5. Moeser, Jack (November 11, 2022). "Ann Arbor based band Kingfisher dazzles with debut album". The Michigan Daily. Retrieved June 7, 2025.
  6. Hardman, Neville (April 9, 2025). "Hear Racing Mount Pleasant's spellbinding debut single "Call It Easy"". Alternative Press Magazine. Retrieved June 7, 2025.
  7. 1 2 Farrell, Margaret (May 9, 2025). "Racing Mount Pleasant Share New Single "Racing Mount Pleasant"". Stereogum. Retrieved June 7, 2025.
  8. Farrell, Margaret (July 11, 2025). "Racing Mount Pleasant Announce Self-Titled Debut Album: Hear "Your New Place"". Stereogum. Retrieved July 11, 2025.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Darville, Jordan; Wang, Steffanee; Helfand, Raphael; Renshaw, David (August 15, 2025). "4 New Albums You Need: Dijon, KAYTRANADA, Steve Gunn, and more". The Fader. Retrieved October 1, 2025.
  10. 1 2 3 Green, Walden (August 15, 2025). "10 Albums Out This Week You Should Listen to Now". Pitchfork. Retrieved October 1, 2025.
  11. 1 2 "Racing Mount Pleasant, by Racing Mount Pleasant". Bandcamp. Retrieved October 1, 2025.