Mitski
The Land Is Inhospitable And So Are We (pink Aster)
The blue slipcase is what makes this package special, nine embossed shards are raised to the touch. Die cut shapes
reveal a partial image of the primary album photograph by Ebru Yildiz (and will offer other views when you pull the
record out of the slip). The back of this slipcover features a beautiful typographic lyric excerpt printed in hot orange
ink, and as a nice surprise, the inside of the slip is printed with a hot orange flood of color. The rest of the album
package is the same as the standard offering.
Sometimes, Mitski says, it feels like life would be easier without hope, or a soul, or love. But when she closes her
eyes and thinks about what's truly hers, what can't be repossessed or demolished, she sees love. "The best thing I ever
did in my life was to love people," Mitski says. "I wish I could leave behind all the love I have, after I die, so that
I can shine all this goodness, all this good love that I've created onto other people." She hopes her newest album, The
Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We, will continue to shine that love long after she's gone. Listening to it, that's
precisely how it feels: like a love that's haunting the land.
Love is always radical, which means that it always disrupts, which means that it always takes work to receive it. This
land, which already feels inhospitable to so many of its inhabitants, is about to feel hopelessly torn and tossed again
- at times, devoid of love. This album offers the anodyne. "This is my most American album," Mitski says about her
seventh record, and the music feels like a profound act of witnessing this country, in all of its private sorrows and
painful contradictions. But "maybe it's beyond witnessing," she says. At times, it feels like the album is an exercise
in negative capability - a fearless embodiment and absorption of the pain of other bodies. When I ask her what the album
would look like, if it were a person, she says it would be someone middle-aged and exhausted, perhaps someone having a
midlife crisis. But through the daily indignity and exhaustion, something enormous and ecstatic is calling out. In this
album, which is sonically Mitski's most expansive, epic, and wise, the songs seem to be introducing wounds and then
actively healing them. Here, love is time-traveling to bless our tender days, like the light from a distant star.
Mitski wrote these songs in little bursts over the past few years, and they feel informed by moments of noticing -
noticing a sound that's out of place, a building that groans in decay, an opinion that splits a room, a feeling that
can't be contained in a body. It was recorded at both the Bomb Shelter in East Nashville and the Sunset Sound Studios in
Los Angeles. The album incorporates an orchestra arranged and conducted by Drew Erickson, as well as a full choir of 17
people - 12 in LA and 5 in Nashville - arranged by Mitski. And for the first time, it felt important to Mitski to have a
band recording live together in the studio, to create this new sublime sound. Working with her longtime producer Patrick
Hyland, the album has a wide-range of references, from Ennio Morricone's bombastic Spaghetti Western scores to Carter
Burwell's tundra-filling Fargo soundtrack, from the breathy intimacy of Arthur Russell to the strident aliveness of
Scott Walker or Igor Stravinsky, from the jubilation of Caetano Veloso to the twangy longing of Faron Young.
Price
Genre
Format
LP · 1 disc
Release
15-09-2023
Label
Item-nr
1314444
EAN
0656605165042
Availability
Not in stock
Tracks
Title
Artist
1
BUG LIKE AN ANGEL
2
BUFFALO REPLACED
3
HEAVEN
4
I DON'T LIKE MY MIND
5
THE DEAL
6
WHEN MEMORIES SNOW
7
MY LOVE MINE ALL MINE
8
THE FROST
9
STAR
10
I'M YOUR MAN
11
I LOVE ME AFTER YOU