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Review: Weyes Blood, 'Front Row Seat To Earth'

Note: NPR's First Listen audio comes down after the album is released. However, you can still listen with the Spotify playlist at the bottom of the page.


Weyes Blood, <em>Front Row Seat To Earth</em>.
/ Courtesy of the artist
/
Courtesy of the artist
Weyes Blood, Front Row Seat To Earth.

Five years ago, Drake captured the millennial mood with a track abounding in bulletproof swagger and boasts of unconstrained indulgence. "You only live once," he luxuriated. "That's the motto."

That was then; this is now. As Ann Powers has written, youthful pop has veered toward more disquieted territory in recent years. To hear the once-ubiquitous motto "YOLO" chanted as if by an Auto-Tuned monastic choir in "Generation Why" — a new song by Weyes Blood, the performing moniker of twentysomething singer, songwriter and producer Natalie Mering — is a jarring experience, and deliberately so. Elongating her phrasing, she contemplates the four-letter acronym like it's an alien artifact unearthed from another time. Then she intones over arpeggiated fingerpicking, "It's not the past that scares me / Now what a great future this is gonna be." That song appears midway through Weyes Blood's Front Row Seat To Earth and reflects the album's carefully calibrated mood of dystopian serenity.

Growing up in Pennsylvania, Mering tried to find a place in the male-dominated local hardcore scene, but was told that her feminine softness was unwelcome. She's since found more sympathetic collaborators in Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti and Jackie-O M***********, and also dismantled that gendered bias in interviews. "In the beginning, I was convinced by patriarchal white males that authenticity was a certain level of rawness and unsophisticated expression," she recently told Pitchfork. "But then I realized that that's not true at all."

On Front Row Seat To Earth and its predecessor, 2014's The Innocents, vocal poise is one of Mering's greatest expressive tools. She embraces composure as a response to her generation's uneasiness with the ruination of the planet and fading promises of stability and prosperity. Rather than treating gentleness and grace as liabilities, she refracts her kinship with the voices of '60s folksingers like Joan Baez and Mary Travers, '70s soft rockers like Karen Carpenter, and Celtic new-age stylists like Enya — particularly their dulcet timbres, cursive phrasing and willowy vibratos — through her own vision.

Mering and her co-producer Chris Cohen frame Weyes Blood's performances in ebbing-and-flowing chamber-folk, set off by psychedelic detours and surreal manipulations of captured sound. "Be Free" opens with the ecstatic shrieks of children on a playground, an elegantly reedy melody and balmy guitar strums. Her lilting delivery is emotionally insulated. "It's just the two of us, and I want you to be free," she sings. "Don't worry about me — I got my thing." Before it's over, she's vamping over a jaunty horn line. A breathy a cappella duet introduces "Away Above," which opens as a wispy bossa-nova feel is threaded with pearlescent electronic textures. She murmurs an invitation to precarious companionship: "Won't you come meet me at 9? / I'll bring your worst fears if you bring mine." Likewise, "Do You Need My Love," "Used To Be" and "Diary" reexamine intimacy and idealism in ways that showcase Mering's gift for measuring and mediating heady emotions. For her, that's where the power is.

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