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Blue Banisters
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Barnes and Noble
Blue Banisters
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Blue Banisters
Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD
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If
's 2021 album
felt like the atmospheric post-script to her 2019 master statement
,
comes off like the addendum to the post-script. Released just seventh months after its predecessor,
isn't too far removed from the midtempo, woozy tones that defined that album. The 15 tracks here span about an hour running time, and generally stick to the familiar framework of sad-hearted torch songs for a burning world that
has built her entire discography on. Closely inspecting the songwriting, production, performance, and sequencing choice on
, however, reveals some moments of quiet evolution. Moody, dramatic ballads like "Violets for Roses," "Living Legend," and "Arcadia" are the kind of soft excursions into melancholy that have become synonymous with
, all free of percussion and centered around opulent piano chords and distant, emotionally exhausted lyrical perspectives. "Wildflower Wildfire" sounds like it could be a toned-down outtake from the
sessions, and the ghostly ambience that floats in and out of the title track recalls some of the hushed turbulence that flowed throughout 2014's
. Throughout the album, however,
folds subtle moments of strangeness and experimentation in among her more established approaches. Four tracks into the album "The Trio (Interlude)" shows up out of nowhere, shaking us out of the dreamworld created by the first few songs with an aggressive trap beat built around an
sample. It's an overtly jarring moment, but on the following track, "Black Bathing Suit,"
adds a more subtle kind of weirdness into her standard sad pop, dropping samples of cawing crows into the mix, switching the beat on the choruses to include distorted, stumbling drums, and ending the song with layers of yelping, dissonant howls. Much like
channeled
's explosive vocalizations at certain points on
, songs like "Black Bathing Suit" and "Dealer" (a mostly smooth duet with
) find
integrating primal,
-esque screaming with her more polished vocals. The vocal performances and production feel a little less polished than previous albums. Closer "Sweet Carolina" has an almost shocking intimacy to it, with upfront, imperfect vocals that sound more like a quickly recorded voice memo intended to capture an idea as it happens rather than a labored-over studio production. This unfussy vocal adds to the dream-like quality of the instrumental and makes it one of the album's sweetest moments. Much of
has this kind of casual, first-take energy, and functions more like a mixtape than an album as
cultivates a sustained atmosphere, but still makes room to try out new ideas and inject some unexpected moves into her established sound. ~ Fred Thomas