Kiss Each Other Clean
Kiss Each Other Clean is the fourth studio album by the American indie folk project Iron & Wine, led by singer-songwriter Sam Beam, released on January 25, 2011, through 4AD internationally and Warner Bros. Records in the United States.[1][2] Produced by Brian Deck, the album features full-band arrangements with layered instrumentation, including horns, thumb piano, and multitracked vocals, evolving from the sparse acoustic sound of Iron & Wine's earlier work toward a more ambitious and eclectic folk-rock style influenced by artists like Paul Simon.[3][2] It consists of ten tracks, such as "Me and Lazarus," "Tree by the River," and "Godless Brother in Love," recorded over a three-year hiatus following the band's 2007 release The Shepherd's Dog.[1] The album's production emphasized sonic experimentation, with Beam and Deck focusing on bold melodies and rhythmic complexity to create a "brighter, more focused" sound while retaining Iron & Wine's idiosyncratic charm.[3][4] Critically, Kiss Each Other Clean received positive reviews for its imaginative details and growth, earning a 7.7 out of 10 from Pitchfork, which praised tracks like "Rabbit Will Run" for their intricate arrangements, though some noted it lacked the cohesion of prior efforts.[2] Commercially, it debuted at number 2 on the Billboard 200 with approximately 39,000 copies sold in its first week and topped the Billboard Folk Albums chart.[5][6]Background and recording
Development
Kiss Each Other Clean marked Iron & Wine's fourth studio album, arriving after a three-year hiatus since the release of The Shepherd's Dog in 2007.[2][7] Sam Beam, the creative force behind Iron & Wine, approached the project with a deliberate intent to push beyond his established musical boundaries, continuing the progression from the project's early lo-fi, solo acoustic roots toward more expansive band-driven arrangements.[2] This evolution reflected Beam's ongoing artistic restlessness, as he sought to incorporate additional layers and experimental elements to invigorate his songwriting.[8] The album's brighter, more focused sound drew significant inspiration from the early-to-mid-1970s AM radio pop that shaped Beam's youth, evoking a nostalgic yet refreshed aesthetic.[9][10] Its title originated from a line in the closing track, "Your Fake Name Is Good Enough for Me," encapsulating Beam's thematic exploration of renewal and intimacy.[11]Recording and production
The album Kiss Each Other Clean was produced by Brian Deck, marking his third collaboration with Iron & Wine following The Creek Drank the Cradle (2002) and The Shepherd's Dog (2007).[12] Recording engineer Jake Westermann handled the sessions, which took place primarily in 2010, while mastering was completed by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound.[13] The production emphasized lush, layered arrangements achieved through full band involvement, contrasting with the lo-fi, bedroom-style recordings of Iron & Wine's earlier work.[12] This shift introduced a more polished sound, incorporating added vocal harmonies, electric instrumentation, synthesizers, and percussion to create dynamic textures.[14] Sam Beam aimed to deepen the layered approach established on The Shepherd's Dog by exploring new sonic elements, with the goal of crafting a "huge-sounding" record that felt expansive and immersive.[3] As Beam noted in discussions with Deck, the process drew inspiration from the clean, dry production of artists like Joni Mitchell and Steely Dan, using selective reverb to heighten contrasts while keeping the core elements acoustic and organic.[12] The album's visual design was created by the art collective The Heads of State, with Sam Beam contributing the photography and illustrations to align the packaging with the record's thematic depth.[13]Musical style and themes
Musical style
Kiss Each Other Clean represents a blend of indie folk and pop elements, characterized by electric guitar-driven arrangements, subtle funk influences, and touches of synthesizers. The album features full-band dynamics with layered rhythms, including hypnotic thumb piano and chopped-up pan flute loops, alongside horns such as saxophone on tracks like "Big Burned Hand."[2] These elements contribute to a brighter, more focused sound that evokes the 1970s AM radio era, with airy vocal harmonies and softly strummed acoustic guitars creating a mellow, nostalgic vibe reminiscent of soft-rock and P-Funk grooves.[15] This marks a contrast to Iron & Wine's earlier rustic acoustic style, evolving toward a polished, electric feel that incorporates orchestral instrumentation like tuned percussion and electric guitars.[16] The album's sonic palette is lush and transcendental, with soothing electric textures and multitracked vocals that build full-band energy. Sam Beam aimed for a "streamlined pop record" inspired by late 1960s and early 1970s singer-songwriter albums, such as those by Elton John and Fleetwood Mac, emphasizing high-mixed vocals and dry production for a fun, singable quality.[17] This results in a "brighter rainbow" within Iron & Wine's repertoire, showcasing modern singer-songwriter stylishness through detailed arrangements like groovy horns and falsetto-driven hooks.[18] The opening track, "Walking Far From Home," exemplifies this with its layered vocals verging on gospel, supported by clean production and intimate yet expansive dynamics.[2] Overall, the album's layered soundscape—textured with fuzzy synthesizers, gritty guitar rock, and wailing saxophone—reflects an experimental indie pop evolution from the band's lo-fi folk roots, prioritizing balanced, retro-infused accessibility.[7]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Kiss Each Other Clean explore love through intimate relationships. In tracks like "Godless Brother in Love," Sam Beam portrays affection amid broader emotional contexts.[19] Similarly, "Tree by the River" evokes wistful teenage romance with lines such as "I mean the world / To a potty-mouthed girl / And a pretty pair of blue-eyed birds," capturing the intensity of young love against a backdrop of fleeting time.[20] Religious and biblical imagery recurs as a core motif, drawing from Beam's Southern upbringing and longstanding discography to underscore grace and human frailty. Songs like "Me and Lazarus" reference the biblical figure of Lazarus to meditate on resurrection and vulnerability, portraying a solemn grace in the face of mortality with whisper-like introspection.[2] "Godless Brother in Love" extends this with allusions to spiritual redemption, while broader biblical nods—such as Cain and Abel in surreal vignettes—serve as economical metaphors for moral duality and inner conflict, emphasizing humanity's fragile pursuit of goodness.[21] These elements continue Beam's tradition of using religious language not for doctrine but to illuminate personal and ethical struggles.[21] Americana descriptions infuse the lyrics with nostalgia and personal reflection, grounding abstract emotions in evocative, pastoral scenes that evoke solemn grace amid everyday life. Tracks like "Tree by the River" use river imagery as a recurring symbol of destruction, redemption, and rejuvenation, tying into nostalgic reflections on lost innocence and the passage of time in a quintessentially American landscape.[20] This earthy poetry shines in "Rabbit Will Run," creating introspective narratives through layered, reflective storytelling.[2] The album examines personal and societal themes with introspection, continuing Beam's focus on human frailty and nostalgia.[19]Release and promotion
Release details
Kiss Each Other Clean was released on January 25, 2011, by 4AD worldwide and Warner Bros. Records in the United States.[22][23] It marked Iron & Wine's first full-length album for 4AD, following their earlier releases on Sub Pop.[24] The standard edition consists of 10 tracks with a total runtime of 44 minutes.[25] The iTunes Deluxe Version adds two bonus tracks: "Black Candle" and "Lean Into the Light," extending the length to 51 minutes.[26] A limited-edition reissue on opaque pink vinyl was released on September 20, 2024.[27] In the lead-up to the release, Iron & Wine performed nearly all tracks from the album live on January 5, 2011, at The Greene Space in New York City as part of NPR's First Listen series.[28] The album was issued in physical formats including CD and vinyl LP, alongside digital download options.[24][13]Singles and marketing
The lead single from Kiss Each Other Clean, "Walking Far from Home", was released on November 26, 2010, as part of Record Store Day's Black Friday initiative, available initially on limited-edition 12-inch vinyl and CD single and later digitally.[23][29] The track was accompanied by an animated music video directed by Emily Schubert, featuring surreal, hand-drawn imagery that complemented the song's introspective tone and the album's whimsical elements.[30] Follow-up singles included "Me and Lazarus" in 2011, released as a promotional CD single by Warner Bros., highlighting the album's blend of folk introspection and rhythmic drive.[31] Similarly, "Tree by the River" was issued as a promotional single in 2011, with a free digital download offered via Amazon MP3 to build fan engagement ahead of and following the album's launch.[32][33] Marketing for Kiss Each Other Clean centered on Sam Beam's artistic evolution toward a more polished pop-folk sound, as emphasized in a 2010 Spin interview where Beam described the album as a "more pop record" compared to his earlier, lo-fi work.[34] Promotional efforts incorporated animated visuals and layered aesthetics, such as Schubert's video, to evoke the album's eclectic production and thematic depth, tying into Beam's shift from sparse acoustics to fuller arrangements.[30] Pre-release buzz was generated through 2010 announcements, including the October Spin reveal of the album's title and January 25, 2011, release date, positioning it as a "focused pop record" to signal Iron & Wine's major-label debut on Warner Bros.[34]Touring
Following the January 25, 2011, release of Kiss Each Other Clean, Iron & Wine embarked on a post-release tour beginning in late January, featuring initial U.S. dates at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles on January 25 and 26, followed by a high-profile performance at New York City's Radio City Music Hall on January 29.[35][36] The tour showcased the band's expanded full-band configuration, with an eight- to eleven-piece ensemble including horns, keyboards, banjo, mandolin, backup singers, and electric guitars, designed to faithfully replicate the album's lush, orchestral arrangements in a live setting.[37][38][39] Performances integrated new material from Kiss Each Other Clean—such as "Half Moon," "Big Burned Hand," "Tree by the River," "Me and Lazarus," and "Rabbit Will Run"—alongside older hits like "Naked as We Came," "Boy with a Coin," and "Cinder and Smoke," highlighting the project's evolution from Sam Beam's early solo acoustic folk roots to a more ambitious, band-driven electric rock sound.[38][37][39] At the sold-out Radio City Music Hall show, one of only three initial U.S. dates, the setlist emphasized this progression through extended, experimental arrangements blending funk, free jazz, and '70s-inspired elements, with older tracks reworked to match the album's boisterous production.[39][37] The tour extended through 2011, including a ten-night European leg starting in Stockholm shortly after the U.S. opener and additional dates such as a March 16 performance at Sage Gateshead in England, allowing the band to promote the album's intricate soundscapes across continents.[39][40] As a promotional tie-in to tour preparations, Iron & Wine delivered a full-band live broadcast on NPR's website from The Greene Space in New York City on January 5, performing nearly all tracks from Kiss Each Other Clean alongside select earlier songs like "Boy with a Coin" and "Naked as We Came," streamed to preview the live evolution of the material.[28]Reception
Critical reception
Upon its release in January 2011, Kiss Each Other Clean received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised its lush production details and Sam Beam's evolution from sparse folk roots toward a more expansive, pop-inflected sound. Pitchfork awarded the album a 7.7 out of 10, noting that it rewards intensive listening with its intricate arrangements and bold melodic risks, marking a further broadening from the band's previous work on The Shepherd's Dog.[2] NME gave it a 9 out of 10, hailing it as a "surprising and majestic triumph" for breaking free from folk heritage through pop-funk fusions and energetic jazz elements. Slant Magazine rated it 4 out of 5 stars, commending its calm beauty and plush elegance, which cast aside earlier raw production for warmer, introspective atmospherics.[41] The album's Metacritic aggregate score of 77 out of 100 reflected this consensus, based on 37 reviews, with 86% classified as positive.[42] However, some critics found the polished production a drawback, arguing it buffered the emotional impact of Beam's lyrics. For instance, American Noise described it as overdone and too "shiny" compared to earlier works.[18] In retrospective assessments, the album has been viewed as underrated, gaining appreciation for its artistic risks and lyrical depth over time. A 2021 reflection on its 10th anniversary highlighted its prophetic qualities for the 2010s indie landscape, praising Beam's earthy poetry—evident in tracks like "Half Moon"—for blending biblical allusions with ethereal tenderness.[7] It has been recognized in Paste magazine's list of the best indie folk albums, underscoring its enduring place in the genre despite initial mixed fan reactions to its cleaner sound.[43]Commercial performance
Kiss Each Other Clean debuted at number 2 on the US Billboard 200 chart upon its release, selling 39,000 copies in its first week and marking Iron & Wine's highest-charting album to date.[5] It also reached number 1 on the Billboard Americana/Folk Albums chart, as well as the Top Alternative Albums and Top Rock Albums charts.[44] Internationally, the album peaked at number 32 on the UK Albums Chart and number 36 on the Australian ARIA Albums Chart.[45] The album's robust initial sales were propelled by Iron & Wine's extensive supporting tour and prominent exposure through NPR performances, including a live broadcast from New York City's Greene Space shortly before release.[28] In comparison to prior releases, such as The Shepherd's Dog, which debuted at number 24 on the Billboard 200, Kiss Each Other Clean signified a significant evolution in the band's mainstream chart performance.[46] Over time, the album has sustained long-tail success within the indie folk genre, further enhanced by streaming availability of its deluxe edition, which includes two additional tracks and has contributed to ongoing listener engagement on platforms like Spotify. A vinyl reissue was released in 2024.[47][48]Track listing and credits
Track listing
The standard edition of Kiss Each Other Clean features ten tracks, all written by Sam Beam.[49][50]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Walking Far from Home" | 4:46 |
| 2. | "Me and Lazarus" | 3:02 |
| 3. | "Tree by the River" | 3:56 |
| 4. | "Monkeys Uptown" | 3:47 |
| 5. | "Half Moon" | 3:15 |
| 6. | "Rabbit Will Run" | 5:30 |
| 7. | "Godless Brother in Love" | 3:50 |
| 8. | "Big Burned Hand" | 4:12 |
| 9. | "Glad Man Singing" | 4:39 |
| 10. | "Your Fake Name Is Good Enough for Me" | 7:00 |