Indoor Pets: Be Content

What do films like The Goonies, The Breakfast Club and The Sandlot all have in common? They each follow a group of outsiders who possess wit and talent, are easy to root for and are stronger together than apart. The same could be said about British four-piece Indoor Pets (formerly known as Get Inuit). Indoor Pets signed to Wichita Recordings for the release of their debut album Be Content—a return to the unironically anthemic pop/rock choruses of the 2000’s.
There’s something almost cartoonish about Indoor Pets frontman Jamie Glass. He looks like a cartoon. He sounds like a cartoon. But he’s real. The bespectacled, floppy-haired Glass sings like he’s inhaled too much balloon helium, and listeners are likely to love his voice, hate it or fluctuate between the two depending on the day. It may or may not alter your opinion of his saccharine pop pipes, but it’s worth noting that there was no dramatic filtering process to honey his voice. It’s not a radio or Spotify algorithm stunt—his vocals are the real deal. Watch their recent Paste Studio session below if you’re still in denial.
Be Content grapples with personal inadequacies, but doesn’t necessarily try to conquer them. It seeks to loosen up a bit through an open admission of these issues (and hopefully find a community to bond over shared trials and tribulations), whether that’s through bleakness, humor or a combination of the two. Loneliness, self-doubt, fame, anxiety and alienation are all addressed here, particularly on songs like “Pro Procrastinator,” “Being Strange” and “Heavy Thoughts.”