In late
August, the singer, songwriter, and guitarist Adrianne Lenker stood beside a
creek in upstate New York, watching the water move. The day before, Lenker, who
is twenty-nine, had packed up the Brooklyn apartment she’d been sharing with
two roommates. She was preparing to haul a vintage camping trailer across the
country to Topanga Canyon, on the west side of Los Angeles, where her band, Big
Thief, was planning to meet up. For the next couple of months, at least, the
trailer would be home.
Moving
can be disorienting—all that sorting and boxing and tossing out forces a kind
of self-reckoning—and for Lenker the experience was only intensified by the
ongoing anxiety of the coronavirus pandemic, which made imagining any sort of
future feel optimistic, if not naïve. The exhaustion and sorrow of the spring
had left everyone feeling precarious. The sun refracted against the surface of
the creek until the water turned black. Our conversation drifted toward the Zen
idea of impermanence. “Is it too early for this?” Lenker joked. “Nice to meet
you—let’s talk about death.”
Lenker
had spent the past few weeks recording with Big Thief at a home studio in the
Catskill Mountains, run by the musicians Sam Owens and Hannah Cohen. The rest
of the band—the guitarist Buck Meek, the bassist Max Oleartchik, and the
drummer James Krivchenia—had since left, but Lenker stuck around to renovate
the trailer. She had just ordered a twin mattress, a portable woodstove, and
new linens.
This
month, Lenker will release two solo albums: “Songs,” a collection of tender,
harmonically complex folk tunes, and “Instrumentals,” which is composed of a
pair of slowly unfolding guitar pieces. She made the records simultaneously, at
a remote cabin in New England, in the early, panicked days of both the pandemic
and a breakup. Lenker is a quick and instinctive writer, and even under normal
circumstances her songs are raw and unfussy—it can feel as if they were dug up
whole, like a carrot from the garden. She sometimes speaks about writing as a
kind of conjuring. “She gives a lot of significance to that moment where she’s
holding the guitar,” Oleartchik told me. “I never really think of her, like,
fucking around and playing riffs or something. It’s always this instrument of
witchcraft. It’s always holy. She writes music from this place that’s very
intuitive and fearless, and she has confidence that there’s some kind of spirit
or force that she can listen to.”
Before
Lenker vacated her apartment in New York, she had to paint over an illustration
that her ex-girlfriend had drawn on the bedroom wall. Lenker took some solace
from the idea that the image wouldn’t be erased, exactly—it remained, even if
she couldn’t see it anymore. Lenker has been in romantic relationships with men
and with women, and doesn’t feel any particular obligation to outline her
sexuality in precise terms, though she is comfortable being called queer. “The
fact that there’s still people against that kind of stuff makes the words
necessary,” she told me. “But hopefully we move into a place where it’s, like,
You’re what? Why are you saying what you are?”
The
wounds from the breakup were still pretty tender. “There’s a fullness that
happens when someone is focussed on you,” Lenker said. “For me, if I’m being
fully looked at and paid attention to and seen, I’m filled up by that.” She
continued, “Now there isn’t anyone to text; there are no love messages coming
through. I feel so empty. There’s a song on the new record, ‘Zombie Girl,’ and
the refrain is ‘Emptiness / Tell me about your nature.’ That’s a real question.
I want to understand—what is this feeling of emptiness? Is that me? Am I just
hollow and empty? Or is emptiness actually something beautiful?”
As we
talked, Lenker teared up. I hadn’t yet had to idly watch someone cry from six
feet away. As she wiped her cheeks, I crammed my hands in my pockets and
mumbled something about how the worst and saddest thing about heartbreak is
that it always ends.
Big
Thief formed in Brooklyn in 2015, and quickly became one of the most acclaimed
new bands of recent years, in part because of Lenker’s emotional transparency,
and in part because of how her voice, which is delicate and craggy, complements
the group’s bold use of dissonance and volume. In 2019, Big Thief was nominated
for a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album, but its work is more commonly
described as folk rock, a characterization that, although accurate—the band is
as indebted to visionary singer-songwriters such as Judee Sill and Vashti
Bunyan as it is to Sonic Youth and Neil Young—feels too tame. Big Thief’s best
songs begin quietly, and expand until it seems as though a major artery were
about to burst. The results can be strange and thrilling. “Adrianne has that
disorienting quality all real-deal types have, where she comes at her songs so
sideways that it subverts the form,” Jeff Tweedy, the front man for Wilco, told
me. “Sometimes you would swear it’s a mistake or misunderstanding of her own
song—‘Why’d she start singing there?’—but it’s not, it’s a precise angle that
only she seems to possess.”
The band
grew out of a partnership between Lenker and Meek. They met at a show in
Boston, where they had both been undergraduates, and then ran into each other
at a bodega on the day Lenker moved to Brooklyn. “I was moving into a warehouse
in Bushwick with ten other artists,” Lenker said. “I’m pretty sure it was
illegal—there were beams separating the rooms, no windows, a cement floor.” She
and Meek soon began performing as a duo.
“When we
first started playing, we would just sit together,” Meek told me. “She had
these really wild fingerpicking patterns that she had developed, and she would
tune the guitar to so many different open tunings. I had this very syncopated,
rhythmic structure—hers was much more liquid. And, somehow, these different
rhythmic landscapes created something.”
Lenker got
a job as a back waiter at a restaurant on the Upper West Side. “Five days a
week, at one in the morning, I was biking all the way to Bushwick from
Seventy-second and Columbus,” she recalled. “I was saving up for guitar amps,
saving up for a guitar, saving up for a van.”
Meek and
Lenker burned CDs of their music, wrapped them in paper bags, and wrote the
track listings by hand. “Buck and I played coffee shops and back-yard barbecues
and dive bars and birthday parties and shows for nobody for a couple of years,”
Lenker said. In time, they fell in love, and, when she was twenty-four and Meek
was twenty-eight, they got married.
There is
footage of them busking in Washington Square Park in 2014, playing an early
version of “Paul,” which eventually appeared on Big Thief’s début album,
“Masterpiece.” The audience—a middle-aged man in billowing khakis and
sunglasses, a tall guy talking on his cell phone—is gently uninterested in a
New York City sort of way. Lenker and Meek share a microphone. “Paul” is a song
about having a hard time loving another person. “I realized there was no one
who could kiss away my shit,” Lenker sings, her voice resigned. Yet the desire
to be fixed—to find relief through love—remains. “I’ve been burning for you,
baby, since the moment I left,” she admits. The chorus is a mesmeric rush:
I’ll be
your morning bright, good night, shadow machine
I’ll be
your record player, baby, if you know what I mean
I’ll be
a real tough cookie with the whiskey breath
I’ll be
a killer and a thriller and the cause of our death
In the
Catskills, between recording sessions, Lenker and her bandmates sometimes hiked
into the woods to work on a tepeelike structure they had taken to calling a
fort. There was no trail, and getting to it required climbing up the face of a
small mountain, mostly by grabbing the trunks of saplings—a strategy any
reasonable outdoorsperson would describe as inadvisable—and scrambling to find
holds in large rocks. One afternoon, Lenker and I made our way there to sit on
a boulder and talk. She darted uphill gracefully.
Lenker
was born in Indianapolis in 1991, and brought up mostly in and around
Minnesota. She has a younger sister, Zoë, and a younger brother, Noah. When
Lenker was five, she was hit on the head by a railroad spike that fell out of a
tree house in her family’s front yard. “Mythological Beauty,” a song from Big
Thief’s second record, “Capacity,” is addressed to her terrified mother:
Blood
gushing from my head
You held
me in the back seat with a dishrag, soaking up blood with your eyes
I was
just five and you were twenty-seven
Praying,
“Don’t let my baby die”
Lenker’s
parents married young, and joined a fringe religious sect before Lenker was
born. She remembers the group as having “born-again-Christian, kind of cult
vibes—a closed community. We lived in an apartment complex where the
surrounding people were part of the same thing. There were a lot of rules.
Honestly, I remember there being a lot of shame. My sister’s name was evil,
because it wasn’t in the Bible. Certain shapes were evil, too, like the star. When
we prayed, the Bible couldn’t touch the floor, and we prayed under blankets.”
Her mother recalled that sometimes the group provided a chaperon if the family
travelled out of state. (Lenker’s father disputes some of these details.)
Her
parents left the sect when she was four, and for a short while they lived out
of a van. “We were still quite religious until I was about eight or nine,”
Lenker said. “Then I watched my parents take a dramatic turn and discard all
religion.” She found the shift bewildering. “I just remember feeling, like, I’m
not going to go along for this ride.” (Her father has since reconnected with
his faith, and describes his time away from it as hedonistic.)
Lenker
has spent much of her adulthood trying to unpack the experience, and is now
quick to recognize troubling rhythms from her youth when they reëmerge in her
adult relationships. “I sometimes equate intimacy with turbulence, which is
familiar,” she said. “The journey that I’m currently on is just: how do I
transmute some of these patterns of violence?”
Her
ideas of home are constantly changing. “I don’t really think of Minnesota when
I think of home,” she said. “I think of it as part of who I am. The thing that
I come back to is that it’s my loved ones, and Earth. I feel really at home
here, in this spot in the forest,” she said, looking around. “And it doesn’t
feel like it’s anyone’s.”
Eventually,
we climbed back down the mountain. Owens and Cohen had built a stone dam in the
stream that snakes across their property, creating a little basin for swimming.
The stream runs into the Esopus Creek, a sixty-five-mile tributary of the
Hudson River which winds through the eastern Catskills and fills the Ashokan
Reservoir. We walked barefoot over mossy bluestone. The water was clear and bracing.
Lenker disrobed and dunked, letting out an ecstatic yelp.
While
Lenker and the rest of Big Thief were working, they developed a habit of
leaping into the water between takes. There’s something curative about a frigid
plunge, the way it forces the old air from your lungs. “You come out
screaming,” Oleartchik said. In 1702, Sir John Floyer published a treatise on
the benefits of cold bathing, a practice that was then still mostly unknown to
the English. “Cold baths act much on the Spirits, and preserve them from
Evaporation, and render them Strong and Vigorous,” he wrote. It’s comforting to
think that, even in our bleakest moments, there might still be a way to protect
our Spirits from dissipating entirely.
As far
back as Lenker can remember, she has liked to sing. Her voice is soft but
substantial, and contains an airy tremble that sometimes resembles birdsong. On
occasion, she lets it stretch and fracture. On “Not,” a deep and tumultuous
song from Big Thief’s fourth album, “Two Hands,” Lenker sounds nearly feral:
“Not the room / Not beginning / Not the crowd / Not winning,” she grunts. When
the band performs the song in concert, she might start to scream.
Lenker
began playing guitar when she was six, and discovered an affinity for the
instrument. Her father started giving her lessons. “He’d be, like, Whoa—how do
you already know that?” she said. “I was just eating it up.”
When
Lenker was thirteen, her parents divorced. She dropped out of school and moved
in with her father in Minneapolis. He was intent on managing—and, to a degree,
monetizing—her nascent music career. “I think he wanted me to be famous, wanted
me to be the best, wanted me to win that shit,” she said. Lenker did not share
his exact ambitions. She made some recordings but felt disconnected from them.
“The very first music I listened to, and then continued to listen to throughout
that whole time, was by Pat Metheny and Michael Hedges—these guitar guys my dad
loved,” she said. When she was fifteen, a boyfriend introduced her to Elliott
Smith, whose tense and immediate folk songs provided a counterpoint to the more
polished music her father had encouraged. “I was, like, Oh, my God, this is so
good,” she recalled. “This is all I want to do. I don’t want to create these
elaborate, pop-sounding productions.”
At
sixteen, Lenker cut her hair short and briefly ran away from home. She got her
G.E.D., and enrolled in a five-week summer program at the Berklee College of
Music, in Boston. Toward the end of the summer, she made an appointment with
Damien Bracken, the dean of admissions. “I went into his office and I said, ‘I
don’t know any of this music theory, any of this stuff that is on your
curriculum, but can I play you a song?’ ” She performed an original piece
called “Far from Where I Started.” With the dean’s support, she applied for and
received a full scholarship to Berklee, offered by the blues guitarist Susan
Tedeschi. “I’ll never forget the image of, like, twenty-five boys shredding on
guitars in the hallway, preparing for their auditions and exams,” she said. “I
felt self-conscious that I didn’t know those things.” Lenker was still figuring
out how to do ordinary chores, such as buying laundry detergent. “I hadn’t gone
to high school. I left Minnesota, I left home, I was on my own,” she recalled.
“I was seventeen.”
Despite
the intensity of her training, virtuosity doesn’t resonate for Lenker as much
as vulnerability does; she has always been more interested in making emotional
connections. The pop singer Carly Rae Jepsen told me that she has been able to
find enormous comfort in the way that Lenker sings about her life. “I came
across ‘Paul’ while I was in Italy for a solo adventure trip,” Jepsen said.
“The lyrics spoke to me like a journal entry would. She’s brilliantly
confessional.”
In
addition to the recordings that Lenker made as a teen-ager, her work with Meek,
and the four records she has done with Big Thief, she has also released two
solo albums: “Hours Were the Birds,” in 2014, and “Abysskiss,” in 2018. Lenker
is curious about the mechanics of creative work—the spring from which songs
appear—but finds that the process itself is more visceral and perceptive. “How
does a song come into being at all? How does it form and organize itself into
the pattern?” she said. “I never think, Oh, I want to make something that
sounds like this. It’s just reaching for elements. I see the visual of
translucent ribbons flowing in a riverlike way—they’re multicolored. And maybe
there’s one specific color that I want to braid in, and they’re all flowing by,
and maybe it’ll go by for a while with nothing of that color, and then, ‘Ah,
there.’ ”
When I
asked Meek to describe Lenker’s songwriting, he paused for forty-five seconds
to gather his thoughts. “It’s as if she removes her conscious mind from the
room,” he said finally. “She’ll hold her guitar, and she’ll start to speak in
abstractions, or speak in complete nonsense—just sounds and shapes. Then she
emerges from that space, and slowly the words start to form into syllables, and
into the English language, and become a story, or a character, or a reflection
of her own experience. But it has this really clear element of . . .” He
thought about it. “Grace.”
One
evening in early September, Lenker and I sat on opposite sides of Owens and
Cohen’s kitchen table, snacking on figs and cheese. It was raining, and Lenker
lit some candles. Her sister, Zoë, who was visiting for the week, was reading
in a bedroom upstairs. Lenker showed me the room where she was staying, and the
notebook where she had written most of the lyrics for “Songs.” There was a
watercolor of a small cabin and a yellow sky propped up against a mirror, and a
photograph of her grandmother by her bedside. Recently, she had acquired an
electric pencil sharpener, which she demonstrated: “Isn’t that satisfying?” She
picked up the acoustic Martin guitar she plays on the new albums. “I’ve had
this since I was fourteen,” she said, strumming a chord.
Big
Thief was on tour in Europe when covid-19 cases began to spike there. Minutes
before the band was to take the stage in Copenhagen, the Danish government
announced a ban on gatherings of more than a hundred people. The venue was
already full. “We went out in the street and played some acoustic stuff, just
four or five songs. Then we all had to make a snap decision about where we were
going,” Lenker said.
“Suddenly,
we’re all in this lobby of this hotel that’s basically empty, and the dude at
reception is wearing black gloves, and there’s no more music,” Oleartchik
recalled wistfully.
Lenker
flew back to New York City and then headed north, to a cabin in the foothills
of the Berkshires, in western Massachusetts. She was entranced by the sound of
the space, which she described as “like the inside of an acoustic guitar.” She
asked Philip Weinrobe, an engineer and the owner of Rivington 66, a recording
studio on the Lower East Side, to help her make an album there. He agreed, and
Lenker headed back to the city. “She left at, like, 5 a.m. to come pick me up
in Brooklyn,” Weinrobe recalled. “The whole thing was structured around the
space, which was very small, with exposed wooden beams. We could hear the bugs,
we could hear the wind in the trees. The idea was to really lean super hard
into that physical atmosphere, and to create a record that tried to mimic it.
As soon as I got there, everything started to shift: my sense of time, my sense
of self, the way I breathed the air.” He added, “There’s no plumbing in the
cabin. You poop in a bucket.”
They
used a binaural microphone to capture the sound of the room. “You really feel
like you’re sitting in front of Adrianne singing,” Weinrobe said. “You can hear
the birds go by, and you hear the squeak of the fingerboard, and the sound
bouncing off the walls.”
Lenker’s
lyrics often allude to nature, and she toggles between straightforward
narratives and more imagistic lines. Her language reminds me, at times, of
Joanna Newsom or Louise Erdrich—it’s mystical yet highly grounded in the
physical world. On “Ingydar,” a new track, she sings:
His eyes
are blueberries, video screens
Minneapolis
schemes and the dried flowers
From
books half read
The
juice of dark cherries cover his chin
The dog
walks in and the crow lies in his
Jaw like
lead
Weinrobe’s
grandmother died while they were recording, which meant that he and Lenker were
both suffering a loss. “I wrote nine of those songs once we started the
session,” Lenker said. “We would record them the same day that I wrote them. I
was surprised at how much I was writing, because I was in so much pain. I was
not in the part of the pain where I was just reflecting on it.” She added, “I
feel as if my psyche was putting as many things together as I could from my
relationship, as many beautiful things as I could, to preserve it into
eternity.” One of the instrumental pieces, “Music for Indigo,” was originally
written as a kind of offering—something for her former partner to listen to as
she fell asleep at night.
Two
years ago, in California, Lenker bought a used Toyota Land Cruiser with a
multitone paint job and a manual transmission. She drove it back East and began
fixing it up, sanding down the exterior and refinishing it in a bright, hopeful
blue. (The first time I met Lenker, she was in the midst of expertly backing
the truck down a winding driveway and across a narrow wood-plank bridge.) With
some help from an uncle, she outfitted the back of the truck with a foldable
sleeping pad, a cooler, and wooden drawers for tools, clothes, and supplies. It
has enormous tires—“It can go up any kind of mountain road,” she said
proudly—and a beaded medallion hanging from the rearview mirror. It would pull
her trailer across the country.
Lenker
and Meek divorced in 2018. They are now what Lenker describes as “deep
friends.” They didn’t hide their marriage and its dissolution from the press,
exactly, but they also didn’t speak about it publicly. “I feel like it made us
stronger and closer,” Lenker said, of the breakup. “I feel like we sing
together better now, and we write together more. A lot of our love is funnelled
into the music, which is maybe the form it was always meant to have.”
Krivchenia
joined the band shortly after Meek and Lenker got engaged. “I was suddenly
plopped into observing the intimacy, the beauty, and the shortcomings of a
relationship, 24/7,” he said. “It’s been amazing to see it evolve.” He added,
“They broke up, and it was a whole huge year of a specific kind of stress for
them, and for the band. We did some tours without Buck, when they just needed
to not be together for a while.” Though less dramatic fissures have undone
other bands, playing together seemed only to accelerate the healing process.
“Adrianne is always writing about whatever’s going on in her life, and so when
they were getting divorced she was writing about it,” Krivchenia said. “Buck
was processing that in real time, onstage. Some nights I’d look over and be,
like, ‘Oof, that’s a rough one to hear, man.’ But he was really supportive of
it.”
After
their separation, Meek moved to California and wrote a record, “Two Saviors,”
which he will release in January. It’s got more twang and air than Big Thief’s
albums—Meek is from Texas, and his solo work is infused with the pathos and
mischief of Townes Van Zandt and Waylon Jennings. “I played a huge amount of
shows on my own, learned to surf. And she did her own thing,” he said. “When we
finally did come back together, we jumped right into a tour. The music felt
more important than us. It felt like something we had to serve and set aside
our fears for.”
Meek had
been visiting his partner in the Netherlands, where the government had lifted
coronavirus travel restrictions for people in committed relationships. A couple
of weeks after we first spoke, he sent me a voice memo. “I think we sacrificed
it all for the music,” he said, of his marriage to Lenker. “It was a vessel for
our love and friendship. And then our love and friendship became a vessel for
the music.” It was too hard, in the end, to nurture a new marriage and also be
in a band. “We didn’t actually have a home for maybe four or five years,” he
said. “There was no privacy whatsoever, because we were always on tour. There
was a complete lack of personal time or space. And part of us knew this—we were
aware that it was taking a toll on our relationship.”
In
conversation, I found Lenker attentive and kind, and there were moments during
our time together when the emotional maturity of the Big Thief universe—how
patient and evolved the intra-band negotiations are; how careful the members
are to preëmptively diffuse volatile situations; how they have even adopted the
phrase “everything is optional” to avoid compromising their integrity—felt
almost intimidating. Anyone who has survived an experience via the careful
suppression or compartmentalization of emotion is likely to find Big Thief’s
system of communication astounding. “If you don’t talk, you know, you’re gonna
get to Kansas and you’re still gonna have feelings from Baltimore,” Oleartchik
told me. The end result of all that talking, he said, was the sentimental (yet
still radical) discovery that “it’s actually acceptable to be who you are to
your friends.”
Kyle
Jaster and Misha Handschumacher live down the road from the studio, on Atticus
Farm, where they grow flowers and organic vegetables, and tend to a passel of
free-range heritage pigs. They offered to let Lenker park her trailer in their
driveway while she worked on it, and before long they became part of the
renovation team. When I arrived there one afternoon, Jaster’s brother, Wyatt,
was measuring and installing new plywood subfloors. The trailer was small,
aluminum, and from 1966. The interior was painted cherry red, but Lenker had
just picked out a new color, a mellow cream called Honeyed White. We began
priming and repainting the cabinets, drawers, and trim. “I’m curious how this
trip is going to feel,” Lenker said. “I’m excited about the freedom, but I
haven’t really felt full of relief. I’ve found it almost burdensome: I don’t
know where home is. I don’t know who I belong with.”
When it
grew too dark to paint, we retreated to a fire pit in the back yard. Jaster and
Handschumacher prepared supper—okra and carrots grilled over the fire, chicken
legs, blackberries, homemade ice cream—as their two dogs sprinted in figure eights
around our lawn chairs. At dusk, a large owl swooped along the tree line. Owens
and Cohen came by with beer. At some point, Lenker ended up with a Cuban cigar.
“This was my fantasy when I was a kid,” she said, taking a tentative puff and
laughing. “I wore knee-length jean shorts, plaid shirts, and a backward
baseball cap, and all I wanted to do was eat beef jerky, drive a tractor, and
smoke cigars.” An outdoor speaker played Michael Hurley, Arthur Russell,
Moondog, Lucinda Williams, Bill Callahan. Lenker talked about moving to Vermont
this fall—maybe building a little cabin in a corner of some land that her
sister was buying there.
I left
shortly after midnight. On the drive home, I rolled the windows down and let my
hair blow around. I played “Dragon Eyes,” the penultimate track on “Songs.”
It’s musically spare, with acoustic guitar and just a bit of brushed
percussion. The final verse implores:
Stars
bloom
On a
warm summer night
They
have a clear view
Without
the bedroom light
I just
want a place with you
I just
want a place
A few
weeks later, I returned to the farm to toast the renovation of the trailer. It
was a brisk mid-September evening, and leaves were starting to accumulate in
corners. Jaster and Handschumacher set out platters of gumbo, corn bread, and
succotash on a long picnic table in the back yard. We kept our coats on as we
ate. After supper, Lenker stood in the door of the trailer, holding up a glass
of bourbon, and offered sincere thanks to everyone who had helped her fix it
up. The interior was complete—new hardwood floors, linen curtains hung on
silver wire, a small dining table made from a maple tree on the farm. Lenker
showed me the blue enamel coffee mug she’d placed in the cupboard
(“Unbreakable!”), the books she’d lined up on a small shelf near her bed, the
single cast-iron casserole dish she could use to cook in the woodstove. She
still needed to buy a tire jack and some roadside flares, just in case. She was
leaving in two days.
In
“Letters on Cézanne,” Rilke describes autumn as “containing depth within itself,
darkness, something of the grave almost.” Lenker writes often about time and
loss—how to cling to what we need and let go of everything else. For her,
songwriting is a way of externalizing specific experiences or memories and
pinning them in place, like a butterfly under glass. “I like my songs to be
reminders of certain things that I don’t want to forget,” she told me. Once
they’re captured, then in a sense she is free.
Adrianne
Lenker’s Radical Honesty. By Amanda Petrusich. The New Yorker, October 12,
2020.
Big
Thief’s Adrianne Lenker has two distinct new albums, songs and instrumentals,
coming out on October 23 via 4AD. Today, she’s shared something from songs
called “dragon eyes.” Have a listen below. Both albums were recorded in
April—after Big Thief’s tour was cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic—in a cabin
with engineer Philip Weinrobe. “I grew really connected to the space itself,”
Lenker said in a press release. “The one room cabin felt like the inside of an
acoustic guitar—it was such a joy to hear the notes reverberate in the space.”
Big
Thief’s Adrianne Lenker Shares New Song “dragon eyes”: Listen.
By Evan
Minsker. Pitchfork, October 1, 2020.
Like a
bear trap under autumn leaves, violence lurks beneath the surface of Adrianne
Lenker’s music. That is particularly true of songs and instrumentals, a
forthcoming pair of albums she recorded in April in a one-room cabin in Western
Massachusetts, layering acoustic guitars on analog tape. Her melodies are so
gorgeous, her voice so small and unassuming, it can be jarring to peer through
the galaxy-like sweep of her fingerpicking and discover a glint of menace in
her half-obscured lyrics.
As is
often the case with Lenker’s songs, “anything” seems to be about a memory that
won’t be buried yet refuses to reveal itself completely. Over an overdubbed
shimmer of steel-string guitars, she thumbs through disjointed snapshots of seasons
past. There’s a summer beach day, hazy with desire (“Skin still wet, still on
my skin/Mango in your mouth, juice drippin’/Shoulder of your shirt sleeve
slippin’”), and a Christmas eve with her lover’s family. But whatever happened
here was not all good: That December memory unravels into grocery-store fights,
a nasty dog bite, and a trip to the ER. And even that glance back at summer
revelry feels ominous in the context of the song’s opening couplet: “Staring
down the barrel of the hot sun/Shining with the sheen of a shotgun.”
But
those fleeting glimpses of calamity disappear almost as soon as they flash out,
while the song’s fragmentary verses lead to a chorus as unguarded and
plain-spoken as anything Lenker has written. “I don’t wanna talk about anything/I
don’t wanna talk about anything,” she sings; “I wanna kiss kiss your eyes
again/Wanna witness your eyes lookin’.” Then she repeats a variation of the
chorus’ opening line and concludes, “I wanna sleep in your car while you’re
driving/Lay in your lap when I’m crying.” On the page, it might not look like
much, but sung in Lenker’s high, lonesome voice, multi-tracked in quavering
unison with herself, these lines are remarkable for their intimacy and
vulnerability. For a song about distant and ambiguous memories, there’s
something about “anything” that feels unusually alive. The way Lenker sings
“kiss kiss your eyes again”—the subtle repetition, the unexpected pause at the
end of the line—feels like she has taken the pulse of joy itself, capturing the
cadence of a racing heart in a moment of stillness.
Adrianne
Lenker : “anything”. By Philip Sherburne. Pitchfork ,September 3, 2020.
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