You don’t have to do everything on your own. That is the quiet thesis running underneath ‘Easier Said Than Done’, the third album from Pool Kids. It is a record full of late-night breakdowns, group text demos, half-rehearsed toy bell performances and the kind of honesty that does not come easy, even among close friends.
“I was used to making up my mind and never wavering,” says vocalist and guitarist Christine Goodwyne, reflecting on what changed during the making of the album. “But I was surprised to see myself change my mind. And I noticed it happening with the others, too. Something about it was kind of freeing.”
“I kept waking up in a panic in the middle of the night”
If Pool Kids have always thrived in chaos, this time they fully leaned into it. Their last few years have been a blur of relentless touring, late-night Logic sessions and long-distance collaboration. All of it has been stitched together by a commitment to staying DIY – or at least, as DIY as they could manage while still staying sane. After years of couch-surfing and booking tours themselves, they have now signed to Epitaph. “They’re constantly emailing us with ideas and support,” Christine says. “It makes me feel like I can relax a little, like I’m not the only one gunning to keep things moving. If I were still spending 20 hours a week cold-calling bars in Louisville, it might be another 10 years before you hear another record from us.”
They are not exaggerating. ‘Easier Said Than Done’ is the result of months of work packed into five intense weeks of recording, mostly in Seattle, sometimes while sleeping on floors, and always with a Planet Fitness shower just a car ride away. “We were working such long days,” Christine remembers, “sometimes forgetting to eat or take breaks at all. I kept waking up in a panic in the middle of the night, which is something I’ve never dealt with before.”
“It’s the most straightforward ‘pop’ song we’ve ever made. There are sections that don’t even have my guitar”
And yet, somehow, the album sounds more expansive than anything they have done before. Songs that started in Logic bounced between genres as they evolved. “We tried out new ideas on the fly,” says bassist Nicolette Alvarez. “We looked at everything as a collective through an even more powerful microscope than before.” From slacker rock to synth pop to glimmering acoustic moments, no sound was off-limits. They taped drum mics to chests. They detuned pianos with ping-pong balls. At one point, Andy Anaya and Christine were at their absolute emotional low, trying to ring rainbow toy bells in time at a studio called The Unknown. “We looked at each other like we wanted to absolutely kill each other,” Christine laughs. “You can hear those bells, reversed, at the end of ‘Tinted Windows’. They sound sick.”
If it all sounds chaotic, it was. But it was held together by a deep trust between bandmates. That same trust carried over to how they knew when to stop. “Once everyone’s notes start getting kind of arbitrary or vague, that’s usually when it’s time to call it,” Christine says. It is an instinct that only develops after years of knowing when someone’s nitpicking and when something’s genuinely off.
Lyrically, Christine gave herself a rule. Only write from the present moment. No old journal entries, no digging through past notes. Just what she was feeling, right now. “By letting myself get specific, I feel a lot more emotionally connected to the songs,” she says. “I was writing about what life has been like for all of us over the last few years.” That specificity brought with it a lot of Florida. She did not set out to root the album in place, but it happened naturally. Vivid little snapshots. Drives down Alligator Alley, blurry tour memories, fleeting connections caught mid-collapse. “Instead of just stating how I felt, I tried to describe a scene that would maybe evoke that feeling.”
“We just want to keep trucking”
There is a lot of letting go on this record. Letting go of old habits. Of expectations. Of the idea that progress is linear. But also of control. Christine, who has spoken openly about her OCD diagnosis, finds some catharsis in that process. “OCD can just rob your life of joy,” she has said. “Things can be going so well, and then it just sucks any enjoyment out of it.” That tension between clarity and overwhelm, progress and panic, pulses through every track.
And then there is the leap. On previous records, Pool Kids were sonic maximalists, layering jagged riffs and spiralling arrangements until they clicked. But ‘Easier Said Than Done’ also leaves room for breath. “‘Sorry Not Sorry’ definitely feels like the biggest leap,” Christine says. “It’s the most straightforward ‘pop’ song we’ve ever made. There are sections that don’t even have my guitar.” From a band known for precision, that is a bold move, but one that pays off.
What anchors everything is the band’s sense of collectivity. They are still a long-distance band, rehearsing in bursts before tours, trading files between cities, and making decisions as a unit. “We just want to keep trucking,” Christine says. “We feel like a well-oiled machine now.”
Of course, none of this came easily. There were moments of doubt, second-guessing, lying on studio floors and wondering if they had completely lost the plot. But they came through it together. And they are proud of what they have made. “I feel like so many of my answers end up sounding overwhelmingly negative,” Christine admits. “But things are great right now. We’re proud of the record. We feel supported by our fans. It’s been really fulfilling. We’re excited for whatever comes next.”
What comes next? More touring. More writing. Maybe fewer panic showers. Definitely no experimental flute EP. At least not yet.
And the best thing someone could say about the album? “That it made them feel something,” Christine says. “Whatever the feeling is wouldn’t matter. It’s just so special when art is able to make you feel something.”
Pool Kids’ album ‘Easier Said Than Done’ is out now.
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