The other day, I was reading in New York Magazine about how “Everything is a kids menu now.” New York’s food editor Alan Sytsma had observed that a lot of newly opened restaurants in the city were “recreating childhood food memories more or less exactly,” citing elevated takes on buttered noodles and McNuggets; given the state of the world, he concluded, “We should probably eat some pudding cake while we have the chance.”
The “kids menu” article struck a chord with me, in part because I have a profoundly unrefined palette—I only ate raw fish for the first time a couple of years ago, in large part to save face in front of friends—but mostly because I couldn’t help but apply the same logic to music right now. So much of what comes across my desk seems to offer a gourmet take on something that millennials and Gen X-ers would have loved at some point from childhood to early twenties: Chappell Roan taps into Teenage Dream-era Katy Perry and early Gaga; Phoebe Bridgers and Boygenius superimpose the vocal tone and lyrical directness of pop-punk onto office-friendly folk-rock; Frost Children made an album of shouty ’00s pop, à la Cobra Starship, then one of wintry indie, à la Bright Eyes.
Honey, the new album by Caribou, is also ordering from the adult kids’ menu. The dance music milieu with which Dan Snaith tends to be associated has trended this way in recent years: Four Tet remains hard to pin down, thanks to left-field collaborations like last year’s “Darkness, Darkness,” with William Tyler, and the intermittent use of his alias ⣎⡇ꉺლ༽இ•̛)ྀ◞ ༎ຶ ༽ৣৢ؞ৢ؞ؖ ꉺლ, but he’s now best known to many people as the happiest guy ever to headline Coachella, grinning maniacally onstage next to Fred again.. and Skrillex as they drop walloping crowd-pleasers. Floating Points’ latest record, Cascade, is a sharp pivot to extremely danceable dance music after years playing with ambient jazz and modular synthesis. Music with mass appeal—particularly music that harks back to a time in which its intended listener may have been more limber, and had more stamina to stay out dancing till 6 a.m.—remains very big business.
With Honey, Snaith shoots his own distinctive style of dance-adjacent music—tracks that sound like they were composed entirely with stuff you could find at a high-end earthenware store—into the cheap seats, toning down the rose-tinted melancholy of 2020’s Suddenly and 2014’s Our Love in favor of tracks that feel rambunctious, bordering on aggressive. The songs on Honey resemble the thrill-seeking dance tracks Snaith usually releases under the alias Daphni, but more in the way you might describe them than in the way they actually sound. The stank-face-inducing womp-womp-womp drop of this album’s title track, for example, is only related to the manic Latin jazz loop of Daphni’s “Always There” in the same way that we all come from the Cradle of Africa.