The Pains of Being Pure at Heart Call It Quits After More Than Decade-Long Run

Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat

It was not an easy decision for The Pains of Being Pure at Heart to make: The Brooklyn-based shoegaze band announced their break-up in an Instagram post on November 5. In the over-two-hundred-word letter, founder Kip Berman detailed his emotion and a plan of new music project The Natvral.

“Pains was a distinct moment in my life,” from Berman’s points of view.  He said, “I started the group when I first moved to New York and completed our last record, The Echo of Pleasure, shortly before my daughter was born and I moved to Princeton, NJ. From that time forward, I never really felt the same—and the music I was creating didn’t feel the same either.”

“But this is good, both for my heart and my music,” he continued. He explained the break-up is not totally woeful, because “the strange something that inspired what we were able to create is absent. What has taken its place feels very different, and I have to express it in a different way.”

Berman also expressed his wish to share his new music next year. “I’ve spent this past year making a new record, and hope to share it sometime next year,” he added, “In the meantime, you can hear a cover I did of one of my heroes, Dear Nora, in the bio.”

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart was formed in 2007 by a group of New York-based musicians, including bassist Alex Naidus, guitarist/vocalist Kip Berman, drummer Kurt Feldman and keyboardist/lead singer Peggy Wang. The old-school indie pop and shoegaze acts released their first album, The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, in February 2009. With the team of legendary producers Flood (Smashing Pumpkins) and Alan Moulder (My Bloody Valentine), their resulting album Belong in 2011 received positive reviews from the public. A Sunny Day in Glasgow’s Jen Goma and brass player Kelly Pratt later took over the duties after the departure of Wang and Naidus; the new line-up released Days of Abandon in 2014. Their last album The Echo of Pleasure, which was heavily inspired by ’80s new wave and pop, dated back to 2017.

Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat

Miranda ZY. Wong: Music journalist/Content contributor. Here to spread the news you want to know.
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