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For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women) [Summer Sky Splash Vinyl] [Barnes & Noble Exclusive]

Current price: $23.79
For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women) [Summer Sky Splash Vinyl] [Barnes & Noble Exclusive]
For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women) [Summer Sky Splash Vinyl] [Barnes & Noble Exclusive]

Barnes and Noble

For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women) [Summer Sky Splash Vinyl] [Barnes & Noble Exclusive]

Current price: $23.79

Size: BN Exclusives

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Michelle Zauner
conjures a transcendent pop majesty on her poetic and finely rendered fourth album with her band
Japanese Breakfast
, 2025's
For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women)
. The album arrives in the wake of the tidal wave of success
Zauner
experienced in 2021 with her memoir Crying in H Mart about working through her mother's death from cancer and reconnecting with her Korean heritage. That same year,
also released
Jubilee
, which earned a Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Album. Needing to process all she had been through,
took a year off in 2023. She moved to her birthplace of Seoul, South Korea, ostensibly to begin work on her second book, but also to connect more directly with the food and culture that inspired her. The hiatus proved transformative and she eventually found her way back to music. Working with producer
Blake Mills
,
has crafted an album that works as a darkly intoxicating contrast to the bright pop of
.
has always drawn upon a mix of '80s influences, but here
and the band conjure a dark, goth-like magic, evoking the full-masted galleon productions of bands like
the Church
Japan
, and
the Cure
. Her songs reveal themselves slowly; her voice a cherubic bell-tone cutting through the coastal fog of analog orchestral synths, crystalline acoustic guitars, and gargantuan basslines. Yet there are moments of lyrical twang, as on "Men in Bars," her sun-dappled duet with a gruff-voiced
Jeff Bridges
, or "Winter in L.A." which sparkles with a
Beach Boys
wistfulness. There's a densely literate feeling to the album, one most obviously represented in the title, which is a reference to a
John Cheever
short story. There's also the shimmering atmospheric lead single "Orlando," which borrows inspiration from 15th century Italian Renaissance writer
Matteo Maria Boiardo
's epic poem "Orlando Innamorato." Impressively,
's songs luxuriate in feelings of romantic longing and sexual folly much in the same way
Cheever
and
Boiardo
do in their writing. Grande literary tropes aside, there's a sense that
is reflecting on her relationships and questioning not only the other person's actions, but her own. On "Honey Water," she sings, "Why can't you be faithful?/Why won't you believe?/They say only love can change a man, but all that changes is me." She explicitly underlines her feelings of dissonance on "Winter in L.A.," revealing "I wish you had a happier woman...someone who loves the sun." It often feels like
is questioning herself, staring into a mirror and wondering whether she is the sad girl who avoids the sun, or the ideal woman, like the "Venus from the shell" who emerges from the sea to bedevil a man in "Orlando." For
, the answer is always something in between and more complex and creatively assured than what has come before. With
invites us into the magic mirror of her life and pulls us through to the other side. ~ Matt Collar

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