Laurel Hell (original) (raw)

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2022 studio album by Mitski

Laurel Hell
Studio album by Mitski
Released February 4, 2022 (2022-02-04)
Recorded 2017–2021
Genre Synth-pop indie pop electro-rock
Length 32:25
Label Dead Oceans
Producer Patrick Hyland
Mitski chronology
Be the Cowboy(2018) Laurel Hell(2022) The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We(2023)
Singles from Laurel Hell
"Working for the Knife"Released: October 5, 2021 "The Only Heartbreaker"Released: November 9, 2021 "Heat Lightning"Released: December 7, 2021 "Love Me More"Released: January 12, 2022 "Should've Been Me"Released: September 26, 2022[1]

Laurel Hell is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter Mitski, released on February 4, 2022, through Dead Oceans.[2] Patrick Hyland produced the album, which has been characterized as a record blending synth-pop, indie pop and electronic rock styles. According to Mitski, the album title is a folk term for being trapped in thickets of laurel that grow in the southern Appalachian Mountains.[2]

The album was preceded by the lead single "Working for the Knife" on October 5, 2021,[3] and the second single "The Only Heartbreaker" on November 9, 2021.[2] They were followed by two more singles: "Heat Lightning" and "Love Me More". Mitski promoted the album with the Laurel Hell Tour covering North America and Europe and running from February to November 2022.[4]

Upon release, Laurel Hell received acclaim from music critics, who praised its lyrics and production. Commercially, the album peaked inside the top ten in territories such as Australia, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and the United States, marking Mitski's highest charting record in all of them. It was also the best-selling album in the US during the week of its release, and the first Billboard 200 top-ten album for Dead Oceans.[5] Laurel Hell also became her first album to top the US Top Alternative and Rock Albums charts.

Mitski wrote most of the album's songs before and during 2018, finishing the album during the COVID-19 lockdowns.[6] Mitski also described the album as a "soundtrack for transformation, a map to the place where vulnerability and resilience, sorrow and delight, error and transcendence can all sit within our humanity, can all be seen as worthy of acknowledgment, and ultimately, love". She expressed that she wrote the album as she "needed love songs about real relationships that are not power struggles to be won or lost" as well as "songs that could help me forgive both others and myself. ... I needed to create this space mostly for myself where I sat in that gray area."[7]

Laurel Hell is a synth-pop,[8][9] indie pop,[10] and electro-rock[11] album influenced by the sounds of the 1980s.[8] It incorporates elements of new wave,[12] pop, disco, and dance music as well.[13] The album was previously conceived as a punk album, then a country album, before settling on its current electronic form.[14] Album opener "Valentine, Texas" "builds into a swelling, glam rock instrumental break, with glimmering synths and driving piano lines" as "the narrator wonders who she'll be tonight; opening the door to a new self, she hopes the mountains in the distance will help lighten the mental weight she carries."[15] "Working for the Knife" puts a "dream pop spin on the avant-garde industrial music of the late eighties".[16] On "Stay Soft", Mitski sings about "providing love to someone who isn't willing to give it back, retreating into a shell caused by past wounds". On "Everyone", Mitski sings of "leaving, running and abandonment" over techno beats.[17] "The Only Heartbreaker" is an '80s new wave and Scandipop[8] song "where Mitski grapples with feeling like she can't pull her weight in a relationship."[13] "Heat Lightning" is a song about insomnia that resembles an R&B slow jam.[18] "Should've Been Me" is a baroque pop song "that finds Mitski witnessing a lost love attempt to find solace in a copy of herself."[19]

Professional ratings

Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 83/100[20]
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [21]
The A.V. Club B−[15]
The Daily Telegraph [22]
DIY [23]
Exclaim! 9/10[13]
The Independent [24]
NME [25]
The Observer [26]
Pitchfork 7.8/10[10]
Rolling Stone [27]

At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publication, Laurel Hell received an average score of 83 out of 100, based on 27 reviews, indicating universal acclaim.[20]

Paolo Ragusa at Consequence gave Laurel Hell a perfect score, describing it as the sound of "Mitski trusting herself, confidently blazing forward into the next decade of her storied career."[28] Commenting on the hiatus Mitski took from music in the aftermath of her previous full-length Be the Cowboy, DIY's Ben Tipple said "That Laurel Hell exists only because it almost didn't gives it its power. It provides the space for her mastery of songwriting, and Patrick Hyland's understated yet orchestral production places Mitski in a realm all her own. She finds her voice in loss, an involuntary yet necessary response to throwing in the towel. But there's an ever-present tentative undercurrent, one that highlights the fragility of her return. The light at the end of the tunnel is flickering at best. You can't help but feel that it's all one broken brick away from tumbling down, which is exactly why it plays out with such delicate urgency."[23]

In less favorable reviews, Steven Hyden of Uproxx described the LP as a "disappointment", saying that "Laurel Hell meanwhile is a tentative, frustrating record of half-measures trapped between musical worlds to which Mitski refuses to commit."[29] Meanwhile, Gabrielle Sanchez of The A.V. Club said "The qualities that make Mitski great—her urgency, rawness, and stark ferocity—feel muted here".[15] The song "The Only Heartbreaker" proved particularly divisive among critics. While David Smyth of the Evening Standard hailed it at as an "air-punching blast of Eighties-influenced synthpop" with hit potential,[30] Pitchfork's Cat Zhang cited its production as having the "effect of anonymizing her, subsuming a first-class songwriter into a tired palette."[10]

Year-end lists

Publication List Rank Ref.
A.V. Club The 25 Best Albums of 2022 Honorable Mention [31]
Clash Clash's Albums of The Year 26 [32]
Crack Best Albums of 2022 43 [33]
Esquire The 25 Best Albums of 2022 N/A [34]
Exclaim! Exclaim!'s 50 Best Albums of 2022 39 [35]
The Forty-Five Albums of the year 2022 4 [36]
Gigwise Gigwise's 51 Best Albums of 2022 10 [37]
GQ Best Albums of 2022 N/A [38]
NME The 50 Best Albums of 2022 21 [39]
Northern Transmission Top 50 Albums of 2022 24
ourculture The 50 Best Albums of 2022 45 [40]
Pitchfork The 50 Best Albums of 2022 43 [41]
Pitchfork The 38 Best Rock Albums of 2022 N/A [42]
The Ringer The 33 Best Albums of 2022 25 [43]
Rolling Stone The 100 Best Albums of 2022 60 [44]
Slant Magazine The 50 Best Albums of 2022 25 [45]
Under the Radar The 100 Best Albums of 2022 11 [46]
Yardbarker The 20 Best Indie Albums of 2022 N/A [47]

All tracks are written by Mitski, except where noted

Laurel Hell track listing

No. Title Length
1. "Valentine, Texas" 2:35
2. "Working for the Knife" 2:38
3. "Stay Soft" 3:16
4. "Everyone" 3:47
5. "Heat Lightning" 2:51
6. "The Only Heartbreaker" (Mitski, Dan Wilson) 3:04
7. "Love Me More" 3:32
8. "There's Nothing Left for You" 2:52
9. "Should've Been Me" 3:11
10. "I Guess" 2:15
11. "That's Our Lamp" 2:24
Total length: 32:25

Japanese edition bonus tracks[48]

No. Title Length
12. "Glide" (Lily Chou-Chou) 3:41
13. "Valentine, Texas" (demo version) 2:49
Total length: 39:03

Rough Trade exclusive bonus tracks[49]

No. Title Length
12. "Valentine, Texas" (demo version) 2:49
13. "Love Me More" (demo version)
14. "Stay Soft" (acoustic version)
15. "Glide (Lily Chou-Chou)" 3:41

Notes

  1. ^ "Triple A Future Releases". All Access. Archived from the original on September 15, 2022. Retrieved September 17, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Minsker, Evan (November 9, 2021). "Mitski Announces New Album Laurel Hell, Shares New Song "The Only Heartbreaker": Listen". Pitchfork. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
  3. ^ Martoccio, Angie (October 5, 2021). "Mitski Cuts Sharp and Sure With 'Working for the Knife'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  4. ^ Martoccio, Angie (November 9, 2021). "Mitski Destroys Everything She Touches in 'The Only Heartbreaker,' Previews New Album". Rolling Stone. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
  5. ^ Caulfield, Keith (February 13, 2022). "'Encanto' No. 1 on Billboard 200 Chart for Fifth Week, Most for a Soundtrack Since 'Frozen'". Billboard. Retrieved February 13, 2022.
  6. ^ Krol, Charlotte (November 9, 2021). "Mitski announces new album 'Laurel Hell', shares single 'The Only Heartbreaker'". NME. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
  7. ^ Shafer, Elise (November 9, 2021). "Mitski Announces New Album 'Laurel Hell' Along With Second Single 'The Only Heartbreaker'". Variety. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c Chick, Stevie. "Mojo – March 2022". Mojo. Retrieved February 10, 2022.
  9. ^ Olivier, Bobby (January 31, 2022). "On Laurel Hell, Mitski dashes over the dance floor". Spin. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  10. ^ a b c Zhang, Cat (February 2, 2022). "Mitski: Laurel Hell Album Review". Pitchfork. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  11. ^ Wolper, Caitlin (February 2, 2022). "Mitski's Laurel Hell Succeeds in Spite of Its Identity Crisis". Paste. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  12. ^ Ma, Nathan (February 2, 2022). "Mitski: 'Laurel Hell' Review". Crack Magazine. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  13. ^ a b c Currie, Jordan (January 31, 2022). "Mitski Is Vulnerable and Mysterious in Equal Measure on 'Laurel Hell'". Exclaim!. Retrieved February 2, 2022. sounds of disco and pop taking centre stage
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