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Kristian North has arrived at the jarring, hi-fi perimeter of 80s excess. The former Babysitter frontman’s second album, Passion Play, is the terminus for a career exhausted by the fringes of garage punk. Trading his road-worn guitar for digital synths and analogue drum machines, North's solo efforts have been anchored by his acerbic, yet heartfelt lyrics, his songs playing like short stories with their quaint confessions, cloaked desires and mythical references. It is the output of an artist moving on from a decade of acidic punk, unafraid to explore new musical genres or lyrical themes. 2018's The Last Rock N Roll Record playfully acknowledged these cliches of the aging songwriter, with nods to underappreciated mid-career albums by classic rock artists like Lou Reed or Neil Young. And while Passion Play also exists in this terminal zone, it is an earthier, more restrained record, permeated by the unlikely soft-rock of Warren Zevon, the downtempo groove of Marvin Gaye, the arty disco of Roxy Music, and the inscrutable new wave of Sparks. North’s latest is, on the surface, a simple collection of love songs. But Passion Play’s romantic motifs also blanket more cynical themes of deception, failure and doubt. Eight sincere songs, filled with double entendre, word play and subtle humor, served on a derelict disco supernova. Its analogue production, snappy run-time and sheer sincerity translate seamlessly to wax, providing listeners with 28 minutes of luscious sophisti-pop.