Haim say I quit as in, I’m done caring. Here’s an album based on all the oldest California-isms in the book: Seek and you will find. Live your truth. Let go of what does not serve you. Or, quoting Alana Haim in the press release, “Every single song has a theme of quitting something that isn’t working for us anymore.” I quit also proudly advertises its credentials as American rock’n’roll, quoting Abraham Lincoln and Bruce Springsteen in opener “Gone,” exploring acoustic folk with fresh attention on soon-to-be-underappreciated hits like “Love You Right” and “Blood on the Street,” and inviting co-producer Rostam Batmanglij’s love of vintage acoustic texture, breakbeats, and left-field sound design into a combination of influences that sometimes goes a little haywire.
That’s right, it’s those same girls who made Women in Music Pt. III: They sense your impulse to treat them like a grown-up Sweet Valley High triple threat doing a band because it really does make for great content—all that purposeful walking!—and they know it doesn’t matter how many stone-cold classic rock references you make or how many surreally cool Paul Thomas Anderson projects you star in, some people are never going to treat you like the other guys. Not that there’s anything wrong with making pop music! They are, in their own words, “becoming the band we’ve always wanted to be.”
Talk like this gives me a migraine, but as I understand it, I quit is announcing its intention to be as emotional, self-indulgent, conflicted, silly, stoned, and heartsick as any woman on Stevie Nicks’ green Earth has a right to be. Like MUNA, Haim are chanting a hook about doing “what[ever] I want.” Like on Solar Power, they’re interpolating one of George Michael’s all-time biggest hits. (“HAIM dug deeper into the pop archives and sampled… ‘Freedom! ’90,’” writes the author of this album’s official bio, who’s never been below sea level.) The sound is sturdy but a little more laid-back, even for this famously sun-dazed group. The problem is that I quit is uneven, even within songs: often equivocating instead of disarming, partially vested in several musical directions, sometimes landing a devastating blow, and sometimes vastly overshooting its lyrical ambitions.
Imagine going out with a bang: what you’d say, to whom. I quit starts so strong: “Can I have your attention please/For the last time before I leave?” Danielle Haim begins, and then, “On second thought I changed my mind.” As in real life, I quit’s declarative force is shadowed by indecision and the accumulated weight of all one’s previous choices. Or: “Wasting time driving through the Eastside/Doing my thing ’cause I can’t decide if we’re through,” as Haim put it to a dusty hopscotch beat on will-they-or-won’t-they-break-up lead single “Relationships,” a pool-party jam with an appropriately tortured backstory that pays off for a reportedly challenging recording process that overlapped Danielle and longtime producer Ariel Rechtshaid’s breakup.