Passion Pit's Michael Angelakos has revealed in a series of tweets that he is going on hiatus from music for mental health and mental health awareness reasons.

UPDATE: Michael gave a statement to Pitchfork clarifying that he is not going on hiatus, he is just "taking time away from being a commercialized artist." He said that he "cannot continue to operate in this space, this industry, due to the way that it functions and treats people that work for it or create within it." Read his full statement below.

Michael's tweets read:

Until it is safer and healthier for us to be advocates, to be a writers, producers, and performers, I simply cannot continue making music. You're either committed to it or not. To raise awareness one moment and announce a show the next doesn't help me. It hurts me. And others. I love Passion Pit and I love music even more. When something would be wrong, I'd try to ignore it. Then I'd almost die. Really.History loves to repeat itself and it's because of systems and their flaws. So, I decided to make solving this issue my priority for now. xo

how many more episodes of behind the music do we need? how many more artists need to die? sexual harassment lawsuits need to be thrown out? i make so much music on a regular basis. the only way i can do that is because i work really hard to stay healthy. better health = more art. it's the 5th-anniversary of Gossamer, an album that is about and the product of a manic episode. I nearly lost everything, including my life

As mentioned in his tweets, Gossamer -- which saw Michael confronting his mental health head-on in the lyrics -- turned five just a few days ago. Earlier this year, he gave away his new album Tremendous Sea of Love for free to fans who retweeted neuroscientist Michael F. Wells. That album gets a proper digital release this Friday (7/28), and all proceeds will go to the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at Broad Institute.

Michael will continue to focus on The Wishart Group, a company he started to aid musicians who need legal, educational and healthcare services.

This news comes just days after the tragic and unexpected suicide of Linkin Park's Chester Bennington. Michael was one of several artists to pay tribute to Chester.

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Passion Pit's Statement to Pitchfork:

Contrary to the headlines, I am not really on hiatus. That might be a bit of a casual word to use in this scenario. I make music every day, it’s part of my life. I just played a show and I am about to officially release an album. The proceeds from the album are going entirely to psychiatric scientific research at The Stanley Center / Broad Institute. I was an artist before I was signed and working within this industry, and (as confusing as it may be to many people, myself included) I am continuing to be an artist with or without the industry.

What I am actually doing — what I have said I am going to do — is all the work required in the development of The Wishart Group. It requires my full attention, which means taking time away from being a commercialized artist. It requires me to explain this because the idea that we can do several things at once and really create change, especially in the realm of mental health, is clearly not working. It’s just not enough, though I wish it were.

I cannot continue to operate in this space, this industry, due to the way that it functions and treats people that work for it or create within it. It does nothing to promote the health required in order to produce the work it sells. The risks associated with being a commercialized artist and embarking on a typical album release, like endless promotion and touring, have nearly killed me. People often throw these words around casually as well, but when I say that these requirements have nearly killed me, have killed many people, and continue to kill people; I am not stating a fact. I am speaking from a very real and personal place. I live this, and I watch other artists struggle with the friction between their health and their art.

I only have a certain amount of attention, so it should be used carefully. I started The Wishart Group and will be focusing full time on its developments. I will be advising other industries, and doing any work that is required at this current juncture until I have achieved certain goals and helped build a new system. We need better systems, systems that can actually contain and tend to workers, like artists who want to and have been contractually signed into deals to make music for people.

I want to create more levels of security because I know that everything we are discussing today is truly about security—often, it is how much we are lacking it. Artists (just one example of a working class) have never been truly taken care of. It subtly or aggressively defies logic like so many other things, until suddenly someone presents something logical, perhaps in the form of a suggestion or solution. To connect artists and create a real community for them, to empower them, is to set an example for them and the myriad of other systems we care about. This is a priority; one of many priorities. We should prioritize work that can set an example.

Music is a luxury. We are so lucky to have it. And if it is not a luxury, as people are telling me otherwise, saying it is absolutely essential to our culture, then I’d like to see systems in place that reflect this sentiment, not just financially. Protecting health is the first step in maintaining a culture’s artistic output. The music won’t go away and will only improve when there is health and we must stop believing that we must suffer for art—life is hard enough and we all know it.

Tremendous Sea of Love is being released this week, along with the official foundation of several first steps in achieving the goals of The Wishart Group—goals that should speak to many people, not just artists. Gossamer (Reduced), a stripped-down remixing of Gossamer, will also be released in the near future, as well as the reissuing of my first EP and two full-length records on vinyl.

Passion Pit isn’t on hiatus, it’s just evolving, like anyone and everything else. On its fifth birthday, the message behind Gossamer would remain lost if I were not to act on all that I’ve been speaking about since releasing that record. I think it’s important to show people that if we think something can be fixed, then it’s worth at least the attempt to fix it. Rather than talking about it endlessly, which will just reify the feeling we feel day-in and day-out—that it won’t change or that it’s only going to get worse. I certainly understand the feeling, I’ve felt it frequently these past few months, but, no, we’re not doing enough. There’s more that I can do, so I’m going to do it.

See his tweets and stream Gossamer below:

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