Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

Spoon Heads Down New Sonic Paths on its Ninth Album

Spoon’s ninth album, Hot Thoughts, finds the band expanding its sound more than any other time in its two decade-long career. Over the course of that career, the band has crafted nine (including Hot Thoughts) albums of guitar-led indie rock. Each of those records found the group experimenting with its sound in new ways, and Hot Thoughts builds on that history as it incorporates elements of funk and electronic music, along with a bigger production style.

Spoon-Press-Photo-1
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The ten songs on the album run the gamut from the kaleidoscopic opening title track through the gargantuan stomp of “Do I Have To Talk You Into It” and ubiquitous wiry hooks of “Can I Sit Next To You” to the bittersweetness of “I Ain’t The One” and the deadpan swing of “Tear It Down.” Arriving in the middle of the album, “Pink Up” is a spacey jam featuring vibraphone and steel drums, while “Us” closes Hot Thoughts with five minutes of jazz.

Recommended Videos

Jim Eno’s drumming is the standout element on the album. His work is the foundation of the propulsive “Do I Have to Talk You Into” and “Tear It Down” (both standout tracks in their own right). On “I’m Not the One,” Eno’s drumming begins quietly in the background before it increases in prominence as the song develops. Bassist Rob Pope completes the rhythm section, and together he and Eno bring a funkiness to the album, most notably on “Can I Sit Next to You.”

Most bands with nine albums under its belt would have settled on a stylistic formula, but Spoon is heading in the opposite direction. Hot Thoughts finds the group exploring new territory and producing an excellent album in the process.

Spoon’s Hot Thoughts is out now through Matador Records and available on

Amazon

, iTunes, and the Matador Store.

Terence Praet
Terence Praet contributes to The Manual’s New Music Monday column. He studied Philosophy and History at Skidmore College…
8 shows like Better Call Saul that will keep you hooked
These crime shows resemble the best parts of famous spinoff
Giancarlo Esposito in Better Call Saul

Better Call Saul started out as Breaking Bad's little brother, the prequel series that was supposed to be a nice companion piece to the best crime drama of the 21st century. After six seasons and a vivid vision executed by showrunner Peter Gould, the spinoff starring Bob Odenkirk became an equal to its predecessor and even surpassed it in some aspects of storytelling, acting, and direction.

The series follows the life of Jimmy McGill, a sleazy lawyer who slowly loses his morality as he evolves into the broken shell of a man we see in Breaking Bad. The complexity of the other characters and the way the show creates a grander universe that ties both shows together is something to behold. Somehow, Better Call Saul never won a single Emmy for its greatness despite being nominated 54 times throughout the 2010s. It often lost to shinier competitors like Succession and Game of Thrones.

Read more
The 8 best prison TV series of all time
Enter the slammer with these TV hits
The cast of Orange is the New Black

TV transports us to places we wouldn't be able to visit otherwise. Other times, it allows us to live vicariously through people who see the world very differently than we do. I can't think of a genre that gives us a peek into a life we should strive never to replicate more than the prison drama. Spending time in the slammer isn't as abnormal as you would think (about 5% of all Americans have gone to jail at least once in their lifetime). Still, the other 95% of us are always a little curious about what happens behind bars, even if we know it's unpleasant.

Many shows have put their characters in prison for a single episode or a small stretch of the plot (it feels like every sitcom from the 1990s had a prison episode), but we're not going to focus on those series. This list is solely to appreciate the niche genre that places its characters in jail as the main setting and catalyst for the plots. These are the best prison TV series of all time.

Read more
How will The Last of Us adapt the structure of the video game?
The second video game requires the show's creators to make some bold choices.
Pedro Pascal in The Last of Us season 2

There's a very thorny problem at the center of The Last of Us season 2. We've now seen the first two episodes of the season, and so far, they have been pretty faithful to the source material. The raid on Jackson Hole was invented to add some stakes to the show, but Joel's death plays out in a remarkably similar fashion to the video game, albeit with some switches around who he's with.

The show's first season was also remarkably faithful to the video game it was based on, but one huge question lingers around the rest of season 2. Namely, will we see Abby again for the rest of the season? Let's break down how the last five episodes of the season could play out:
The Last of Us: Part II is split almost exactly in half
The Last Of Us Season 2 | April 2025 | Max

Read more