To Be Kind
To Be Kind is the thirteenth studio album by the American experimental rock band Swans, released on May 13, 2014, through Young God Records.[1] A double album comprising ten tracks that total nearly two hours in length, it builds on the band's post-reformation intensity with extended, repetitive compositions blending noise rock, post-rock, and drone elements.[2] The album was primarily produced by Swans' founder Michael Gira and recorded at Sonic Ranch studios in El Paso, Texas, with mixing handled by John Congleton in Dallas.[1][3] Developed from material debuted during the band's 2012–2013 tours and funded in part by supporters through a limited live release (Not Here / Not Now), To Be Kind features guest contributions from vocalists Little Annie, St. Vincent (Annie Clark), Cold Specks (Al Spx), and drummer Bill Rieflin, alongside core members Gira and guitarist Christoph Hahn.[1] Standout tracks include the 34-minute epic "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture," which incorporates funk and free-jazz influences, and the ritualistic closer "To Be Kind," emphasizing the album's themes of persistence, love, and sonic endurance.[2] Critics praised its hypnotic power and emotional depth, with Pitchfork awarding it a 9.2 out of 10, calling it a "mesmerizing spectacle" that expands Swans' scope.[2] The album peaked at number 37 on the Billboard 200.[4] In the context of Swans' discography, To Be Kind represents a pinnacle of their 2010s resurgence, following The Seer (2012) and preceding The Glowing Man (2016), solidifying the band's reputation for uncompromising, transformative live and recorded experiences. Its release marked a commercial breakthrough for the group, with the triple-LP vinyl edition becoming a collector's item due to its elaborate packaging and the album's demanding yet rewarding listening experience.[3]Background and recording
Conception and development
Michael Gira envisioned To Be Kind as a natural extension of Swans' previous album The Seer (2012), seeking to expand upon its epic scope with even longer, more immersive compositions that emphasized repetition, dynamic range, and emotional intensity. In interviews, Gira described the new material as evolving organically from the band's rigorous touring schedule in 2012 and 2013, where initial song fragments were tested and refined live before being fleshed out in pre-production. This approach allowed for a bluesier, more groove-oriented sound compared to The Seer, while maintaining the project's core ethos of creating overwhelming, experiential music that demands full listener engagement.[5][6][7] During pre-production in late 2013, Gira recruited notable guest contributors to enrich the album's vocal layers, including St. Vincent (Annie Clark), who provided multi-tracked vocals on several tracks such as "Nathalie Neal," and Cold Specks, who contributed to a couple of songs with her distinctive, soulful delivery. These collaborations were integrated early in the process at rehearsals beginning in October 2013, adding depth and variety to the band's established lineup. Gira selected these artists for their unique timbres, aiming to contrast and complement the raw power of Swans' instrumentation. Rehearsals took place ahead of recording sessions at Sonic Ranch in Texas.[5][8][3] The album's conceptual influences drew from historical and literary sources, particularly evident in the track "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture," which Gira developed as a biographical ode to the Haitian Revolution leader Toussaint Louverture (1743–1803). Inspired by Madison Smartt Bell's All Souls' Rising trilogy, Gira incorporated phrases and imagery from Louverture's life, including his mastery as a horseman that aided victories against French forces during the slave revolt, symbolizing themes of liberation amid brutality. This historical lens infused the album with motifs of chaos, endurance, and paradoxical kindness, reflecting Gira's interest in evoking visceral, narrative-driven intensity.[5][6] For the album artwork, Gira collaborated with artist Bob Biggs, founder of Slash Records, who provided a series of surreal paintings from circa 1976 depicting distorted baby heads against vibrant yellow backgrounds. These images, recontextualized for the cover and packaging, evoke a duality of innocence and unease, tying into the album's exploration of kindness amid underlying turmoil and chaos. Gira selected them for their striking, otherworldly quality, which mirrored the music's immersive and unsettling emotional landscape.[3][9][10]Recording sessions
The recording sessions for To Be Kind commenced with rehearsals in early October 2013 at Sonic Ranch studio in Tornillo, Texas, a remote facility near El Paso known for its isolation conducive to focused work, and continued through recording and mixing by mid-December 2013, with additional overdubs and mixing at John Congleton's Elmwood studio in Dallas, Texas.[1][11] The album was produced by Michael Gira, with Congleton serving as recording engineer, capturing the band's performances in a manner that emphasized their live energy.[1] The core lineup during these sessions included Michael Gira on vocals and guitar, Norman Westberg on guitar, Christoph Hahn on pedal and acoustic lap steel guitars, Christopher Pravdica on bass, Phil Puleo on drums and percussion, and Thor Harris on percussion, vibraphone, piano, and autoharp.[12] Additional contributors like Bill Rieflin appeared on guitar, synthesizer, and drums across various tracks.[12] Much of the album's material originated from extensive jamming during the band's 2012–2013 tours, where song fragments were expanded through hours-long improvisations, with Gira editing the resulting recordings into structured pieces back at his home studio.[5] This approach led to improvised, groove-based structures that could extend indefinitely, prioritizing hypnotic repetition and rhythmic drive over conventional song forms; for instance, "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture" developed from prolonged takes that built layers of intensity, culminating in its 34-minute runtime on the album.[5][13] Guest musicians enriched several tracks, including St. Vincent (Annie Clark), who provided multi-tracked background vocals on "Kirsten Supine," "Nathalie Neal," "Screen Shot," and "Bring the Sun," creating ethereal layers described by Gira as a "hovering mist."[3][5] Cold Specks contributed background vocals to "Bring the Sun," while Little Annie performed a duet with Gira on "Some Things We Do," and Jennifer Church added vocals to multiple songs including "She Loves Us" and "A Little God in My Hands."[3] Julia Kent arranged and played strings on "Some Things We Do."[3] Post-production involved meticulous mixing by Congleton in Dallas, where Gira oversaw layering to heighten the album's visceral, propulsive feel, drawing inspiration from the relentless grooves of artists like James Brown to sustain an overwhelming sense of momentum and emotional depth.[5] The final mastering was handled at micro-moose-berlin, preserving the recordings' raw power and dynamic range to evoke the intensity of the live performances.[11]Composition and themes
Musical style
To Be Kind is classified as experimental rock, incorporating elements of post-rock, noise rock, and drone, with influences from blackened blues and swamp blues that contribute to its hypnotic and immersive quality.[2][14][15][16] The album's sound is defined by repetitive motifs and gradual builds that create wavelike currents of sound, often evolving from minimalist mantras into intense, overwhelming climaxes.[17][2] Tracks frequently employ polyrhythms and feedback, layered with dense instrumentation to produce a sense of ecstatic propulsion, as heard in the 34-minute epic "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture," which integrates field recordings of horse hooves and animal squeals for added textural depth.[2][17][18] The core instrumentation emphasizes heavy percussion from Thor Harris and Phil Puleo, who handle drums, bells, wind instruments, and additional percussive elements to drive propulsive grooves and mesmerizing cymbal attacks, while Christoph Hahn's pedal steel guitar adds shimmering, atmospheric tones amid droning and chopping electric guitars.[18][17][2] Dynamic shifts are a hallmark, transitioning from sparse, accessible grooves—bolstered by brass, synths, gongs, and layered guest vocals from artists like St. Vincent and Little Annie—to cacophonous barrages of battering-ram guitar blasts and spook-house drones.[2][15] Recorded and mixed by John Congleton, the album integrates tape loops and field recordings into the mix, enhancing its spacious, organic feel and contributing to a production that prioritizes taut, throbbing rhythms over sheer abrasiveness.[17] Compared to prior Swans works like The Seer (2012), To Be Kind offers increased accessibility through melodic hooks and a brighter energy, while retaining the band's signature intensity and commitment to sonic overload.[2][15] This evolution tempers the unrelenting grimness of earlier efforts with funereal yet listenable swamp-blues undertones, making the two-hour runtime a more approachable ritual of repetition and release.[16]Lyrics and concepts
The lyrics of To Be Kind center on kindness as an aspirational response to brutality, positioning it as a defiant act of joy and positivity in a world marked by violence and struggle. Michael Gira, the album's primary lyricist, has explained that the title evokes a sense of uplift, culminating in the title track's closing lines—"There are millions and millions of stars in your eyes"—which suggest wonder and connection amid adversity. The title track itself employs mantra-like repetition of phrases such as "to be kind" to reinforce this theme, creating a hypnotic invocation that underscores kindness not as passive but as a deliberate counterforce to harsh realities.[6][19] Throughout the album, Gira explores power dynamics, spirituality, and human frailty through abstract vignettes rather than linear stories. In "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture," the lyrics draw from the Haitian Revolution, portraying the brutal cycles of slavery, rebellion, and vengeance to interrogate historical and personal imbalances of control. Spirituality emerges as a non-denominational pursuit, with Gira likening the creative process to a church-like ritual that fosters transcendence and completeness. Human vulnerability is starkly depicted in "Oxygen," where imagery of choking and gasping reflects Gira's own near-death experience with asphyxiation and chronic asthma, emphasizing the fragility of existence and the primal need for sustenance. Similarly, "A Little God in My Hands" confronts the imperfections inherent in god-like authority, blending awe with the absurdities of power.[6][5] Gira's writing process relies on stream-of-consciousness techniques, pulling from personal memories, historical events, literature, films, and moments of absurdity to generate raw, intuitive text that eschews conventional narratives. This approach favors ritualistic, evocative phrasing—often repetitive and incantatory—to induce trance-like immersion in the listener, prioritizing emotional and philosophical resonance over plot. Guest vocalists amplify this depth; for instance, Little Annie's duet with Gira on "Some Things We Do" infuses the track with a compassionate, world-weary timbre, drawing on her cabaret background to heighten the song's exploration of human actions and bonds. Other contributors, like Annie Clark (St. Vincent), provide layered harmonies that open up the lyrics' emotional space, balancing the album's intensity with nuanced vulnerability.[6][5][1]Release and promotion
Singles
The lead single from To Be Kind, "A Little God in My Hands", was released digitally on March 21, 2014, through Young God Records, initially offered as a free download to preview the album's intense, driving sound.[20] The single's artwork drew from the album's six-part visual series created by conceptual artist Bob Biggs, with images that had long inspired Michael Gira, emphasizing abstract, monochromatic designs that complemented the record's thematic depth. No B-sides or remixes accompanied this release, focusing instead on the core track's seven-minute runtime. "Oxygen" followed as the second single on November 24, 2014, issued as a digital EP via Young God Records, featuring an edited version, an acoustic take, an early demo, and a live recording from the band's Primavera Sound performance earlier that year.[21] The EP highlighted guest vocalist Little Annie's contribution to the album version, adding soulful layers to the track's hypnotic rhythm, while the B-sides incorporated live interpretations from initial tour dates to showcase the song's evolving stage energy. Promotion included a label-uploaded performance video capturing the band's raw delivery.[22] In 2015, "Screen Shot" was distributed as a promotional CDr single exclusively for radio stations, lacking any commercial physical or digital formats.[23] The singles overall experienced limited commercial impact, failing to enter major charts but securing modest airplay on alternative and college radio outlets.Marketing and formats
To Be Kind was released worldwide on May 12, 2014, through Mute Records, with the North American release following on May 13, 2014, via Young God Records.[8][24] The album was issued in multiple formats, including a standard double CD edition, a triple LP pressed on 180-gram vinyl housed in a gatefold sleeve, and a digital download available in MP3 and FLAC.[12][3] A deluxe edition, exclusive to initial physical releases, bundled the double CD with a live DVD capturing Swans' performance at the 2013 Primavera Sound festival in Barcelona, providing fans with a visual complement to the studio tracks.[25][26] Promotional efforts centered on building anticipation through media previews and artist commentary. NPR offered a full album stream as a "First Listen" on May 4, 2014, allowing early access to the two-hour runtime and highlighting its immersive qualities.[27] In interviews, Swans leader Michael Gira described the album as an intense, groove-driven evolution from prior works, emphasizing its hypnotic repetition and emotional depth to draw in listeners from experimental and noise rock circles.[5] The rollout also featured announcements spotlighting guest contributions from artists like St. Vincent, Cold Specks, and Little Annie, which garnered attention in alternative music communities and festival circuits.[8] Some European triple LP pressings encountered a manufacturing error, swapping the track order on side E between "Oxygen" and "Kirsten Supine," though this did not affect the standard CD or digital versions.[18] Initial distribution included standard black vinyl runs without colored variants, with pricing set around $14.98 for the double CD and $32.98 for the triple LP in North America, reflecting the album's expansive packaging and production costs.[28]Touring and live performances
2014–2015 world tour
The 2014–2015 world tour in support of To Be Kind commenced in March 2014 with initial dates in Europe, including shows in France and the United Kingdom, before shifting to North America in May following the album's release. The extensive itinerary spanned over 160 concerts across multiple continents, with significant legs in the United States (57 shows), the United Kingdom (19 shows), Germany (13 shows), and Canada and France (6 shows each), among others like Italy, Norway, Poland, and Australia. Notable performances included a set at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 12, 2014, and headline dates in major cities such as New York at Music Hall of Williamsburg and London at various venues like Electric Brixton. The tour concluded in July 2015 with final European dates, marking a year-long global promotion that showcased the band's endurance and reach.[29][30][31] Setlists during the tour heavily featured tracks from To Be Kind, often comprising approximately 70-80% of each performance, with staples like "Frankie M.," "A Little God in My Hands," "Just a Little Boy (For Chester Burnett)," "Cloud of Forgetting," and the closing medley "Bring the Sun / The Glowing Man" appearing in nearly every show. These marathon sets typically lasted 2 to 3 hours, evolving slightly over the tour to incorporate more improvisational elements and occasional older material such as "Cloud of Unknowing" from The Seer (2012), reflecting the band's emphasis on immersive, ritualistic live experiences. The core lineup remained stable throughout, consisting of Michael Gira (vocals, guitar), Norman Westberg (guitar), Christoph Hahn (guitar), Chris Pravdica (bass), Phil Puleo (drums, percussion), and Thor Harris (multi-instrumentalist), with the group's chemistry enabling the sustained intensity of their performances.[32][33] The tour's demanding nature took a significant physical toll on the performers due to the unrelenting volume, duration, and emotional ferocity of the shows, often pushing members to the brink of exhaustion. Drummer Thor Harris recalled nearly passing out from the brute force required during the 2013–14 legs leading into To Be Kind promotion, while bassist Chris Pravdica and others frequently battled dehydration and fatigue from sweat loss in sweltering venues without air conditioning. Michael Gira himself collapsed onstage during a 2015 New York show in extreme heat (110°F), later admitting he felt he "had been trying to die," highlighting the psychic and bodily commitment involved. Occasional adjustments were made, such as mid-set intermissions for gear failures like amplifier malfunctions, to accommodate the strain without fully halting the momentum.[34]Notable live renditions
One of the most striking aspects of Swans' live renditions of To Be Kind material was the extended improvisation of "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture," which often stretched beyond 40 minutes onstage, far exceeding its 34-minute studio length.[6] This piece evolved directly from live jamming sessions originating in the prior album The Seer, with bandleader Michael Gira noting that it grew organically through performance, incorporating repetitive motifs and dynamic builds that invited audience immersion.[35] Swans previewed key tracks from To Be Kind at major festivals prior to the album's release, including the 2013 Primavera Sound in Barcelona, where they debuted the title track, "Just a Little Boy," "She Loves Us," and an early version of "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture," showcasing the band's raw, unrelenting energy in a set that blended new material with established pieces.[36] Similarly, at the ATP I'll Be Your Mirror festival in Melbourne that same year, the band performed "To Be Kind" alongside previews like "Mother of the World / Screen Shot," highlighting the album's expansive, immersive sound in a festival context.[37] Official video documentation of these performances was released alongside the album, with the deluxe edition featuring a DVD of the full 2013 Primavera Sound set, preserving the visceral intensity of the preview show for wider audiences.[3] Additional live recordings from the 2014 tour, including selections from To Be Kind, appeared in later compilations like Not Here / Not Now, further capturing the band's evolving interpretations.[38] Fans and critics frequently highlighted the hypnotic, ritualistic atmosphere of these renditions, describing how the prolonged repetitions and building crescendos created a trance-like communal experience, often leaving audiences exhausted yet exhilarated by the performances' meditative depth.[39][40]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in May 2014, To Be Kind garnered widespread critical acclaim, earning a Metacritic score of 88 out of 100 based on 35 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim," and an AnyDecentMusic? aggregate of 8.6 out of 10.[41][42] Critics frequently praised the album's expansive, immersive scope and emotional depth, with Pitchfork awarding it 9.2 out of 10 and describing it as a "mesmerizing spectacle of an omnipotent band whose sound continues to expand in scope," highlighting Michael Gira's evolution toward a more hypnotic and cathartic intensity.[2] The Guardian granted it a perfect 5 out of 5 stars, commending its "perfectly listenable swamp blues" and the raw emotional power that Gira channels through repetitive, ritualistic structures.[16] Spin rated it 9 out of 10, noting how the album reaches new peaks in post-rock territory by balancing brutal extremes with moments of transcendent release, further underscoring Gira's growth from early industrial harshness to a more nuanced, overwhelming force.[43] Genre-specific publications echoed this enthusiasm for the album's experimental innovation; The Wire lauded its bold fusion of noise, drone, and blues elements as a pinnacle of avant-garde rock evolution.[44] However, not all responses were unqualified; some reviewers critiqued the album's nearly two-hour length and repetitive motifs as occasionally testing listener endurance, exemplified by Rolling Stone's 3.5 out of 5 stars, which acknowledged the cathartic intensity but found the sprawl somewhat exhausting.[15] Reception showed regional variations, with stronger acclaim in the UK and Europe—where outlets like The Guardian and Drowned in Sound (10/10) celebrated its immersive ritualism—compared to more mixed responses in the U.S. mainstream, where the album's demanding scale drew both admiration and reservations.[16][45]Retrospective evaluations
In the decade following its release, To Be Kind has solidified its reputation as a pinnacle of Swans' oeuvre, frequently regarded as the band's magnum opus for its ambitious fusion of repetition, intensity, and emotional depth. A 2014 assessment in Hyperallergic encapsulated this view by dubbing it the "magnum opus cycnorum," praising its ability to evoke a primal, transformative listening experience akin to a ritualistic awakening.[46] Marking the album's 10-year anniversary in 2024, retrospectives among fans and critics reaffirmed its enduring appeal, with user scores on Album of the Year averaging 89/100 from over 8,700 ratings, reflecting broad acclaim for its hypnotic grooves and structural innovation.[47] Music journals and fan discussions have positioned To Be Kind as a catalyst in the noise rock revival of the 2010s, drawing on Swans' no wave roots to reinvigorate the genre's emphasis on sonic endurance and catharsis. When compared to later Swans releases such as The Glowing Man (2016), To Be Kind stands out for its peak accessibility, featuring more pronounced rhythmic drive and melodic anchors amid the noise, which Pitchfork noted as a contrast to the subsequent album's ethereal, less propulsive sprawl.[48] Critical consensus has shifted notably from contemporaneous complaints about the record's sprawling two-hour runtime—highlighted in Drowned in Sound's description of it as an exhaustive "odyssey"—toward recognition of its stamina-building design, especially in live contexts where the extended tracks foster communal immersion and escalating tension. By 2025, the album's September reissue has sparked fresh evaluations celebrating its ageless experimentation, with recent user critiques on Album of the Year lauding its blend of avant-garde hostility and gothic catchiness as timelessly vital.[49][50]Commercial performance and legacy
Chart positions
To Be Kind debuted at number 37 on the US Billboard 200 chart, representing the highest peak position achieved by Swans on that ranking.[4] The album also entered the UK Albums Chart at number 38, another career-best performance for the band.[51] Additionally, it reached number 5 on the Billboard Independent Albums chart.[52] Internationally, the album charted modestly, peaking at number 39 on Belgium's Ultratop 200 Albums (Flanders).[53] First-week sales in the United States were 8,000 units, contributing to its initial chart success.[54] The album's commercial performance was bolstered by synergy with Swans' extensive touring schedule and positive critical reception, which encouraged physical sales including vinyl editions popular among collectors.[52] To Be Kind did not receive any major awards or nominations.Cultural impact and reissues
To Be Kind has exerted a significant influence on the experimental rock landscape, particularly within post-rock and noise genres. Bands such as Godspeed You! Black Emperor have acknowledged Swans' broader impact on their sound, with early works drawing from the intense, immersive structures pioneered by Michael Gira's project, a lineage that extends into the repetitive, epic builds characteristic of To Be Kind.[web:15] Similarly, artist Kristin Hayter, performing as Lingua Ignota, has cited Swans as a key influence, incorporating elements of their raw emotional intensity and thematic depth into her own explorations of trauma and power, echoing the album's visceral drone and cathartic releases.[web:28] The record contributed to the 2010s resurgence of drone and noise rock by emphasizing extended, hypnotic compositions that blurred boundaries between rock, ambient, and industrial sounds, inspiring a wave of artists to embrace lengthier, more immersive formats.[web:78] Within Swans' discography, To Be Kind stands as a capstone to the band's 2010s revival era, encapsulating the evolution from noise-driven aggression to sprawling, groove-oriented epics following the reformation in 2010.[web:77] Michael Gira has reflected on this period in recent interviews as a transformative phase, highlighting the album's role in redefining the band's live and recorded identity through rigorous, collaborative experimentation.[web:47] The album saw reissues in subsequent years to meet ongoing demand. In September 2025, Young God Records released a double CD reissue, maintaining the original tracklist without alterations.[web:30] Earlier, a limited-edition red triple LP, signed by Gira and restricted to 500 copies, was issued in 2022, featuring the full double album spread across three vinyl discs.[web:99] Marking its tenth anniversary in 2024, To Be Kind prompted retrospective coverage, including articles analyzing its enduring numbness and philosophical weight in contemporary rock.[web:51] Fan communities organized tributes, while the album's legacy was further explored in broader discussions of Swans' evolution. Culturally, To Be Kind appears in media examining post-punk and experimental music histories. It is referenced in the 2019 documentary Where Does a Body End?, which chronicles Swans' trajectory from no-wave roots through their 2010s resurgence, underscoring the album's place in the band's monumental output.[web:132] Tracks from the record have also informed film aesthetics; for instance, the song "Kirsten Supine" drew direct inspiration from Lars von Trier's 2011 film Melancholia, capturing its themes of existential dread for intense cinematic scenes.[55]Credits
Track listing
To Be Kind is a double album consisting of ten tracks spread across two discs in its standard CD edition.[12]Disc one
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Screen Shot" | Michael Gira | 8:04 |
| 2. | "Just a Little Boy (For Chester Burnett)" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 12:39 |
| 3. | "A Little God in My Hands" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 7:08 |
| 4. | "Bring the Sun / Toussaint L'Ouverture" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 34:05 |
| 5. | "Some Things We Do" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 5:09 |
| Total length: | 67:05 |
Disc two
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "She Loves Us" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 17:00 |
| 2. | "Kirsten Supine" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 10:32 |
| 3. | "Oxygen" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 7:58 |
| 4. | "Nathalie Neal" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Hahn, Harris (music) | 10:14 |
| 5. | "To Be Kind" | Gira (lyrics); Gira, Westberg, Hahn, Puleo, Harris, Pravdica (music) | 8:23 |
| Total length: | 54:07 |