No Shape
_No Shape is the fourth studio album by American singer-songwriter Perfume Genius (Mike Hadreas), released on May 5, 2017, through Matador Records.[1][2] Produced by Blake Mills, the album marks a significant evolution in Hadreas's sound, blending elements of art pop, R&B, and orchestral arrangements to explore themes of love, self-acceptance, transcendence, and queer identity.[2][1] It serves as a follow-up to his 2014 release Too Bright, shifting from earlier introspective trauma toward a more celebratory and stable perspective on personal joy and devotion.[2][1] The record features 13 tracks, including standout singles like "Slip Away" and "Wreath," which highlight its eclectic mix of tender ballads and bold, genre-defying compositions.[1] Critically acclaimed upon release, No Shape earned widespread praise for its emotional depth and musical innovation, with Pitchfork awarding it an 8.8 rating and designating it "Best New Music," while The Guardian hailed it as a "triumphant" leap forward in Hadreas's artistry.[1][2]Background and development
Concept and influences
No Shape represents Perfume Genius's Mike Hadreas's vision of a "transcendental protest record," one that elevates personal love and devotion into a defiant act against societal constraints on queer existence.[1] Hadreas crafted the album as a queer haven of imagination, rebuking minimalism in favor of lush, transgressive beauty to explore themes of love, death, and identity.[1] In interviews, he described the work as stemming from a desire to transcend the body's limitations and societal judgments, creating space for queer joy amid existential dread.[3] This conceptual core frames the album as both intimate tribute—to his partner Alan Wyffels—and broader rebellion, addressing how queer love persists despite threats of loss and marginalization.[3] The album's influences draw from orchestral introspection reminiscent of Sufjan Stevens's early work, particularly the folk-inflected warmth and spiritual depth of albums like Seven Swans, which informed No Shape's blend of hymn-like structures and emotional vulnerability.[4] Hadreas also incorporated retro-futurist R&B elements, evoking Prince's extroverted sensuality and Kate Bush's dramatic flair, to infuse tracks with groovy, otherworldly liberation that contrasts pain with ecstatic release.[2][1] These inspirations shaped the record's sonic expansiveness, moving beyond Hadreas's prior piano-driven minimalism toward grand, collaborative arrangements that amplify its protest against bodily and cultural confinement.[4] Personal experiences profoundly informed No Shape's emotional core, particularly Hadreas's recovery from chronic health issues and addiction. Diagnosed with Crohn's disease as a child, Hadreas has long grappled with his body's betrayal, a theme that permeates the album's meditation on mortality and physical transcendence.[3] His sobriety, achieved alongside Wyffels after years of substance abuse, provided a foundation of stability that allowed Hadreas to confront these struggles with newfound grace, transforming personal pain into universal affirmations of queer resilience and love.[3] This recovery process infused the album with a sense of hard-won serenity, where death and illness become catalysts for deeper connection rather than defeat.[5]Writing process
Mike Hadreas, the creative force behind Perfume Genius, composed the songs for No Shape largely in solitude while living in Los Angeles, where he worked during periods when his partner, Alan Wyffels, was away teaching piano lessons.[6] He relied on piano as his primary instrument for sketching melodies and structures, often capturing initial ideas as voice memos or short drafts, amassing around 40 such pieces ranging from brief fragments to more developed songs.[6][7] This solo process emphasized iterative revisions to achieve emotional authenticity, with Hadreas discarding or refining pieces until their "spirit" aligned with his immediate feelings and personal truths, prioritizing vulnerability over polished narratives.[6] For instance, the track "Slip Away" began as an upbeat, almost-pop song complete with bridge and chorus, but underwent revisions to better capture the purity and defiance of a marginalized love, transforming it into a protest anthem infused with joy and release.[3][8] He aimed to write in the moment about current emotions or desired states, rather than revisiting past events, ensuring lyrics carried integrity without veering into sentimentality.[7] Before involving the full band, Hadreas sought early feedback from his close personal circle, particularly Wyffels, who provided critical input on mood, structure, and overall resonance during informal playthroughs at home.[6][7] This selective sharing helped refine the material while maintaining its intimate origins, with Wyffels later assisting in adapting songs for live settings but not influencing the initial writing phase.[7]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for No Shape took place over two months in the fall of 2016 at studios in Los Angeles, marking a departure from the remote, isolated environments of Perfume Genius's prior albums.[4] Produced by Blake Mills, the process emphasized collaborative experimentation to expand the album's sonic palette beyond intimate piano-led arrangements, incorporating a wider array of musicians and instruments for a more orchestral and dynamic feel.[9] Sessions often began with open-ended jams to spark creativity, allowing Mike Hadreas and the team to build tracks layer by layer, as seen in the development of "Slip Away," where initial demos evolved through trial-and-error instrumentation. Technical approaches prioritized spatial depth and unconventional textures to evoke a sense of transcendence and physicality. Engineers employed a binaural Neumann microphone—shaped like a mannequin head—for many recordings, capturing instruments in stereo to create an immersive, three-dimensional soundscape that made elements feel immediate and enveloping.[10] For instance, the mbira on "Slip Away" was amplified through a Roland Jazz Chorus for a swirling, underwater effect, while guitars were tuned down and played percussively to form dissonant "clouds of notes," avoiding conventional rock tones in favor of ethereal dissonance. A thumbtack-modified piano added harsh, harpsichord-like edges to heighten tension, blending analog warmth with precise digital editing to polish the raw energy of live takes. Specific setups, such as arranging chairs like pews for a group vocal session on "Otherside" to simulate a church choir, further underscored the methodological focus on communal, ritualistic capture of performances.[3][10] Challenges arose in reconciling the album's intimate emotional core with its ambitious scale, as Hadreas grappled with impostor syndrome and the risk of overproduction diluting vulnerability. The team addressed this by iterating relentlessly—Blake Mills often proposed bold sonic shifts, like introducing unfamiliar instruments, to push boundaries without losing authenticity, ensuring tracks balanced raw immediacy with grandeur.[11][3] This iterative method helped overcome creative blocks, transforming initial doubts into defiant, uplifting anthems that captured fleeting moments of joy and release.[10]Key collaborators
The production of No Shape was led by Blake Mills, a renowned guitarist and producer whose prior work included helming Alabama Shakes' 2015 album Sound & Color, which earned a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album. Mills contributed extensively to the record, playing a wide array of instruments including bass, guitar, percussion, and synthesizer, while shaping its lush, expansive sound through meticulous arrangements that blended indie rock with orchestral elements.[12][13] Core band contributions came from Alan Wyffels, Perfume Genius's longtime partner and musical collaborator, who handled keyboards, Fender Rhodes, and synthesizer parts, adding textural depth to tracks like "Slip Away" and "Wreath." Wyffels's role extended beyond instrumentation, providing background vocals that enhanced the album's intimate, layered vocal harmonies. Drums and percussion were handled by session musician Stuart Johnson on select tracks, such as the driving rhythms in "Slip Away," supporting the album's dynamic shifts from introspective ballads to bolder anthems.[12] Guest musicians enriched the project's diversity, with Weyes Blood (Natalie Mering) delivering haunting vocals on "Sides," a warped '80s-inspired pop track that highlights the album's experimental edge. Other notable guests included string arranger Rob Moose on viola and violin, whose contributions infused orchestral swells into songs like "Valley," and bassist Pino Palladino on the closing "Without You," drawing from his extensive session history with artists like The Who.[12] Engineering duties were shared by Shawn Everett and Joseph Lorge, with Everett also overseeing the mixing; Everett, a Grammy-winning engineer known for his innovative techniques on records like Alabama Shakes' Sound & Color, employed creative recording methods such as binaural heads to capture the album's immersive, three-dimensional quality. The sessions, which took place over two months in Los Angeles, benefited from this collaborative technical approach to refine Perfume Genius's vision into a cohesive sonic landscape.[12][14]Composition
Musical style
No Shape represents a bold evolution in Perfume Genius's sound, expanding beyond the synth-pop and piano-driven introspection of his previous album, Too Bright (2014), toward a more orchestral and confident maximalism that embraces lush, dynamic arrangements.[15][2] While Too Bright introduced brasher production elements like electronic pulses and glam-rock edges, No Shape amplifies these into sweeping, genre-blending compositions that prioritize ecstatic builds and layered textures, reflecting a shift from personal vulnerability to transcendent defiance.[1][9] The album's sonic palette fuses art pop, R&B, and orchestral elements, drawing from influences like Kate Bush's dramatic intensity and Prince's flamboyant extroversion to create a decadent yet intimate atmosphere.[1][2] Genre shifts are evident across tracks, such as the hymnal, church-like choirs in "Choir," which evoke rococo urgency with scything strings and choral swells, contrasting the retro-futurist synth-driven pop of "Slip Away," where prodding basslines and glittering synths propel a majestic, fantasy-like propulsion.[2][1] Other fusions include trip-hop beats in "Go Ahead" and calypso rhythms in "Just Like Love," underscoring the album's restless exploration of pop's boundaries.[15] Instrumentation plays a central role in these dynamic builds, with producer Blake Mills layering piano foundations—often plinking and crystalline—with frenzied violins, prowling percussion, and ambient effects like eerie creaks and cartoonish chimes to foster a sense of escalating grandeur.[15][1] Tracks like "Wreath" highlight this through breathless string sections and rhythmic pulses that mimic Kate Bush's orchestral drama, while "Otherside" opens with a massive, emergency-break-glass crash of percussion and tape hiss, setting a tone of ornate theatricality.[1][2] This approach results in a fuller, more moving sound than prior works, emphasizing confidence through hyper-real fidelity and multi-instrumental density without overwhelming the core intimacy.[9][15]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of No Shape, written by Mike Hadreas (Perfume Genius), delve into intimate explorations of love, mortality, and self-acceptance, often framed through a queer lens that transforms personal vulnerability into acts of defiance.[3][1] Hadreas has described the album's textual content as a rebellion against self-imposed limitations and societal norms, where enduring love becomes a form of protest amid ongoing queer struggles.[16] For instance, in the opener "Otherside," Hadreas reimagines religious hymns as personal spells of grace, rejecting exclusionary doctrines while embracing a defiant joy in queer identity and connection.[3] Central to the album is the theme of love as rebellion, particularly in Hadreas's long-term relationship with partner Alan Wyffels, which he elevates to a transcendent, almost divine force against transience and adversity.[16][1] Tracks like "Slip Away" portray this as a bittersweet celebration of unapologetic queer love, urging listeners to "slip away" into ecstatic freedom despite persistent societal threats.[3] Mortality emerges poignantly in "Wreath," where Hadreas confronts body dysmorphia, his Crohn's disease, and the fragility of existence through imagery of hovering "with no shape" until the body yields, blending anxiety with cathartic release.[3][16] Self-acceptance threads throughout, as in "Go Ahead," a resilient anthem dismissing shame and asserting queer embodiment with lines that peel away "every weight" to reveal inner divinity.[1][7] Hadreas's poetic style is intimate and surreal, drawing heavily from his queer experiences to weave domestic mundanities with cosmic metaphors, creating a sense of vulnerable immediacy rather than retrospective narrative.[7][1] This approach manifests in hyper-specific reflections on gender fluidity and addiction, as seen in "Just Like Love," which recalls childhood ambiguities with a tender, hymn-like reverence for innate spirit.[3][16] The closing track "Alan" exemplifies this by capturing quiet epiphanies in everyday partnership, affirming presence as a quiet rebellion against isolation.[1] Overall, the lyrics prioritize emotional transcendence, with the album's swelling arrangements occasionally amplifying their defiant intimacy.[3]Release and promotion
Singles and music videos
The lead single from No Shape, "Slip Away", was released on March 21, 2017, ahead of the album's launch, and served as an introduction to its bolder, more expansive sound. The track features soaring synths and anthemic vocals from Mike Hadreas, building to a euphoric climax that critics described as liberating and triumphant.[17][18] Its accompanying music video, directed by Andrew Thomas Huang, depicts Hadreas and dancer Teresa "Toogie" Barcelo in a frenetic, glitter-filled sequence of friendship and escape, blending camp aesthetics with theatrical choreography that was widely praised for its emotional intensity and visual exuberance.[19][20] "Go Ahead" followed as the second single on April 19, 2017, showcasing a wobbly, synth-driven groove with lyrics exploring defiance and vulnerability. While it did not receive an official music video, the track garnered attention for its uneasy, propulsive energy, positioning it as a bridge between the album's introspective and outward-facing elements.[21][22] "Wreath" emerged later as a promotional single in September 2017, highlighted by a fan-submitted dance compilation video that emphasized choreographed movements to capture the song's themes of transcendence and release. The video, featuring contestant Esperanza's winning submission, amplified the track's ritualistic quality through communal, interpretive dance.[23] "Die 4 You", released on May 9, 2017, rounded out the singles with a stormy, sensual ballad accompanied by a stark music video directed by Floria Sigismondi, in which Hadreas performs a slow, hypnotic dance amid scattered chairs, underscoring the song's themes of devotion and isolation. The video's minimalist choreography and dramatic lighting were noted for their spellbinding intimacy.[24][25] None of the singles achieved significant commercial chart positions on major Billboard rankings, though "Slip Away" saw modest streaming success and radio play within indie and alternative circuits, reflecting the album's niche but devoted audience.Marketing and touring
The album No Shape premiered exclusively via NPR Music's First Listen series on May 5, 2017, where Perfume Genius (Mike Hadreas) provided a track-by-track commentary revealing personal struggles with Crohn's disease, gender identity, and emotional defiance.[3] Pitchfork announced the album on March 21, 2017, alongside the debut of the "Slip Away" music video, emphasizing its themes of queer joy and escapism, while their full review later praised it as a "tender and transcendental protest record."[26][1] The Guardian featured the album in a May 4, 2017, review, highlighting its "confident and melodic" evolution from Hadreas's earlier work into a "rich seam of strange" emotional depth.[27] To support No Shape, Perfume Genius embarked on an extensive 2017 world tour spanning over 100 dates across North America and Europe, beginning in May with headline shows and festival appearances like Eaux Claires and Way Out West, followed by fall legs including support slots with The xx.[28][29] The tour extended into 2018 with additional U.S. dates and a performance at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, where Hadreas delivered high-energy renditions amid the event's sprawling lineup.[30] Setlists evolved from early shows heavy on new material like "Slip Away" and "Valley" to later inclusions blending No Shape tracks with selections from prior albums such as Too Bright, reflecting Hadreas's growing onstage confidence and improvisational flair.[31][32] Merchandise for the tour included limited-edition clear vinyl pressings of No Shape and apparel tied to its visual motifs of fluidity and rebellion, available through official channels like Matador Records and the artist's online store.[33] Interviews during promotion often centered on Hadreas's vulnerability, with him describing the album as a "rebellion against himself" and a space to confront isolation and self-doubt, as explored in discussions with The Skinny and NPR.[7][3] Single releases like "Wreath" were timed to coincide with tour announcements, amplifying live previews of the album's dramatic crescendos.[34]Reception
Critical reviews
Upon its release in May 2017, No Shape garnered widespread critical acclaim for its bold evolution in sound and emotional depth. Pitchfork awarded the album an 8.8 out of 10, lauding it as "pure decadence" that rebukes tasteful minimalism in favor of transgressive beauty, with genre-blending influences from rock, pop, and R&B creating an ecstatic, flock-like energy across its tracks.[1] The Guardian gave it four out of five stars, highlighting a major leap forward in texture and genre experimentation, spanning Sufjan Stevens-style orchestral art pop to retro-futurist R&B fantasias that infuse the record with rapturous confidence and melodic strangeness.[2] Rolling Stone also rated it four out of five stars, praising its optimistic goth-glam aesthetic and the seamless cohesion achieved by Mike Hadreas and producer Blake Mills amid populist ambitions.[35] While predominantly praised, some critiques addressed the album's overambition in production, with Drowned in Sound noting that its diverse musical stylings occasionally render it more like a "collection of songs than a unified album," creating moments of stifling inconsistency.[36] Pitchfork similarly observed a shift to a more claustrophobic atmosphere in the second half, where songs "creak eerily" amid the struggle to sustain earlier power.[1] This strong reception contributed to subsequent award nominations for Hadreas.Accolades
The album appeared prominently in several year-end critics' lists, including Pitchfork's 50 Best Albums of 2017 at number 16, where it was praised for its tender and transcendental qualities.[37] It also ranked sixth on NPR Music's 50 Best Albums of 2017, highlighting its exploration of love's complexities.[38] At the 60th Annual Grammy Awards, No Shape received a nomination for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical, acknowledging the technical excellence of its engineering by Shawn Everett and Joseph Lorge, though it did not win.[39]Commercial performance
Chart positions
No Shape debuted and peaked at No. 185 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart in May 2017.[40] The album performed stronger on genre-specific charts, reaching No. 4 on the U.S. Independent Albums chart and topping the U.S. Vinyl Albums chart at No. 1, reflecting its appeal to niche audiences and physical media buyers. In the United Kingdom, it peaked at No. 96 on the UK Albums Chart.[41]| Chart (2017) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 185 |
| US Independent Albums (Billboard) | 4 |
| US Vinyl Albums (Billboard) | 1 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 96 |
Sales figures
The album saw international performance, particularly in Europe, bolstered by Matador Records' distribution channels.Legacy
Cultural impact
No Shape has played a significant role in advancing queer visibility within contemporary pop music, particularly through its exploration of queer desire, bodily autonomy, and utopian escapism. The album's lead single, "Slip Away," emerged as a prominent anthem in LGBTQ+ communities, frequently featured in Pride event playlists and celebrations for its joyful defiance of societal constraints on queer expression. Readers of The New York Times selected it as one of the top Pride anthems in 2023, highlighting its role in fostering communal resilience and unapologetic joy during annual Pride observances.[42] As an openly gay artist, Perfume Genius (Mike Hadreas) leveraged the album's themes to challenge heteronormative pop structures, contributing to broader cultural dialogues on queer liberation in mainstream music.[43] The album has also received attention in academic musicology, where scholars analyze its contributions to discussions on gender fluidity and performative identity. In a 2021 thesis from Central European University, No Shape is examined for its subversive potential in queer art, particularly through shapeshifting motifs that resist normative gender and sexual binaries in music videos and lyrics.[44] Similarly, a paper on Academia.edu explores the album alongside Perfume Genius's prior work, framing it within theories of hope/lessness and queer reproductivity, drawing on scholars like José Esteban Muñoz to argue for its reimagining of failure as a site of desire and resistance in indie pop.[45] These analyses position No Shape as a key text in understanding how contemporary music negotiates the queer body's visibility and vulnerability. In the 2020s, elements of No Shape have influenced emerging artists through covers and interpolations, underscoring its enduring artistic ripples. While specific samples remain limited, the album's sonic palette—blending baroque pop with R&B-inflected vulnerability—has inspired subtle homages in the works of artists navigating similar themes of queerness and transcendence.Reappraisals
In subsequent years, No Shape has been reexamined as a crucial bridge in Perfume Genius's artistic evolution, transitioning from the menacing experimentation of Too Bright (2014) to the ecstatic rock impulses of Set My Heart on Fire Immediately (2020).[46] This album marked a blossoming phase for Mike Hadreas, where soft-focus romanticism and high-drama orchestration allowed him to explore devotion and vulnerability with greater sonic ambition, laying groundwork for his bolder physicality in later works.[47] Amid reflections on Hadreas's more recent releases like Ugly Season (2022) and Glory (2025), critics in 2025 have underscored No Shape's enduring qualities, describing its production as scattering "color abundantly across bursts of emotion" through drums and synthesizers, and praising its "truly breathtaking tunes" as a high point in his catalog.[48][49] These reappraisals highlight how the album's decadent, devotional core—once celebrated as a bold pivot—has solidified its status as a timeless masterpiece, influencing Hadreas's ongoing maximalist tendencies.Credits
Track listing
All tracks are written by Mike Hadreas, except where noted.[50]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Otherside" | Hadreas | 2:40 |
| 2. | "Slip Away" | Hadreas | 2:45 |
| 3. | "Just Like Love" | Hadreas | 3:14 |
| 4. | "Go Ahead" | Hadreas, Mills | 2:53 |
| 5. | "Valley" | Hadreas | 3:09 |
| 6. | "Wreath" | Hadreas | 4:26 |
| 7. | "Every Night" | Hadreas | 2:47 |
| 8. | "Choir" | Hadreas | 2:28 |
| 9. | "Die 4 You" | Hadreas, Mills | 3:32 |
| 10. | "Sides" (featuring Weyes Blood) | Hadreas, Mills, Mering | 4:52 |
| 11. | "Braid" | Hadreas | 2:58 |
| 12. | "Run Me Through" | Hadreas | 4:44 |
| 13. | "Alan" | Hadreas | 2:46 |
Personnel
The personnel for No Shape includes the following musicians and production staff, as credited on the album release.[52][12] Musicians- Mike Hadreas (Perfume Genius) – vocals (all tracks), piano (tracks 1, 5, 7, 11, 13), synthesizer (tracks 1, 3, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12), Wurlitzer electric piano (tracks 9, 11), organ (tracks 10, 11), kora (track 11), trumpet noises (track 9)
- Blake Mills – piano (tracks 1, 5, 6), synthesizer (tracks 1–4, 6, 9, 12), guitar (tracks 2–4, 6, 9, 10, 12), bass (tracks 3–6, 10), drums (tracks 2, 4), percussion (tracks 2–4, 6, 9, 12), marimba (track 2), baritone guitar (track 3), Marxophone (track 3), Mellotron (track 5), guitarrón (tracks 7, 9, 12), programming (tracks 4, 6), celeste (track 12), Omnichord (track 12), woodwinds (track 12)
- Stuart Johnson – drums (track 2), percussion (tracks 2, 4), cymbals (tracks 3, 9)
- Rob Moose – violin (tracks 3–5, 7, 9, 10), viola (tracks 3–5, 7, 9, 10), string arrangements (tracks 3–5, 7, 9, 10)
- Alan Wyffels – backing vocals (track 6), synthesizer (tracks 7, 10), vocals (track 9)
- Chris Dave – drums (track 12), percussion (track 12)
- Natalie Mering – vocals (track 11)
- Weyes Blood (Natalie Mering) – featured vocals (track 10)
- Pino Palladino – bass (track 12)
- Becca Luce – backing vocals (track 1)
- Joseph Lorge – backing vocals (track 1)
- Shawn Everett – synthesizer (track 13)