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Mitski's New Album: Madness and Mold in a Dilapidated Home
26 Feb
Summary
- New album explores loneliness and delusion within a decaying psychic home.
- Instrumentation blends live band sounds with theatrical, gothic pantomime.
- Artist draws on Americana, blues, and Anglo-Celtic influences.

Mitski's eighth album, "Nothing Is About to Happen to Me," presents a theatrical yet restrained sonic landscape. The artist navigates themes of loneliness and delusion, set against the backdrop of an abandoned, dilapidated psychic home. This introspective setting, overrun by daydreams, mold, and dust, serves as the album's container.
The music incorporates live, in-the-room instrumentation from her touring band, echoing her work on a stage adaptation of "The Queen's Gambit." While referencing past sounds, the album largely continues its predecessor's pastoral feel. Mitski draws deeply from Americana, incorporating rural forms like moonshining blues and Anglo-Celtic ballad influences, with banjos and fiddles accompanying double bass.
This collection showcases a departure from pastiche, with all elements harmonizing aesthetically. Tracks like "I'll Change for You" feature bossa nova lounge, while "In a Lake" culminates in a deranged, grandiose finale with a full horn section. The album effectively portrays a descent into madness, juxtaposing elaborate imagery with raw, solitary introspection.




