Bon Iver
i,i


4.1
excellent

Review

by Rowan5215 STAFF
August 11th, 2019 | 458 replies


Release Date: 2019 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Every daemon decoded, every day de-numbered

A note about Bon Iver's song titles. There's been more silly griping about the Aphex Twin impenetrable thing than was perhaps necessary – I am as guilty of this as any of us – but it struck me listening to "iMi" and realising what those letters meant that there's a straightforward reason for all that crypticism. Justin Vernon wants to confuse and disarm your higher thinking so his music will go straight to the heart, which is the place from where he wants you to hear it.

As such, for all i,i's initial chaos, there are shockingly simple axes on which these songs turn. So while "iMi" seems a direct descendant of 22, A Million's fragmented aesthetic and "We" plays like a cut from an alternate universe where Bon Iver and Kanye made a rap group, the album unfurls into something gentler with "Hey, Ma" and largely stays that way. "Naeem" is not only a clear highlight and one of the best songs Vernon has composed, it kicks off a song cycle which seems to investigate the major thematic concerns of the Bon Iver project – love ("Marion"), responsibility and accountability ("U" and "Jelmore") and uh, "Faith" - as straightforwardly as the self-titled album catalogued places he'd been. There's some politics, a less-trodden area for Bon Iver but communicated with grace: "Sh'Diah", a very Bon Iver anagram for 'shittiest day in American history', takes three years of anger and disenfranchisement, far too potent to be summed up in any words, and lets a saxophone do the talking instead. Vernon's degree in religious studies would qualify him to write about the subject more than most in the scene, but that always comes subservient to his own beautifully expressed ambivalence. And while nothing here cuts to the bone as cleanly as "I'm still standing in the need of prayer", the harmonisation of hope and doubt when Vernon writes about religion is still second to none, as when "Faith" puts aside the higher questions and rips your heart out with a line: "and do we get to hold what faith provides? Fold your hands into mine".

There's no more obvious signal of Bon Iver's progression as a project than, well, its literal evolution into a band. For Emma purists lament the loss of intimacy of that album; a connection made by Vernon's recording in a cabin that has, somewhat ridiculously, become an honest-to-god indie myth and not just four walls and a roof where he recorded some really good songs. Truth is, none of that intimacy has gone, just the direction it's flowing has changed. Bon Iver today has traded that one-to-one, man-to-listener intimacy for the many-to-many intimacy shared between Vernon's circle of collaborators. Just hear the way that acoustic in "Marion" plays off six-piece horns recorded basically live; how "iMi" slams together a brass freakout, some James Blake wildness (vocal and instrumental) and that peaceful hook from Justin; when that fucking beat drops on "Faith"; or "Holyfields," a near-improvisation which achieves greatness when a simple violin transforms the song.

Even if the album at points can drift too far into the abstract, there is a final exhale to ground us once again. "RABi" is the most unvarnished Bon Iver's been since 2009, and not just musically, though the electric guitar strum is so relaxing it gives "Island in the Sun" a run for its money. But the lyrics could be a personal note addressed from Vernon to his audience without even a hint of artistic intervention. "Well it's all just scared of dying", he basically sums up Bon Iver, the anxieties romantic and spatial and religious that have plagued him since the beginning of this project - then defines i,i's response to these with one more line: "well it's all fine and we're all fine anyway". This album plays as the sober morning after 22, A Million's headspin of a night out, the moment after waxing rhapsodic about the mysteries of life, death and religion when you fold your clothes and get on with the damn day. In this way, it's a refutation of its predecessor as much as "these will just be places to me now" was a moment of closure to Bon Iver, Bon Iver's travelogues, themselves a conscious evolution from the singular place and time which birthed For Emma, Forever Ago. Justin Vernon may be uniquely talented in mixing disparate sounds into one package, but he can only do so by burning some bridges and salting the earth as he goes – leaving previous selves behind him on the way. This tricky, fickle, strange dedication to emotional progress is what defines Bon Iver, makes them so uniquely, irrefutably human, and so goddamn touching even when you can't understand what a single lyric means.

"But on a bright fall morning, I'm with it
I stood a little while within it"



Recent reviews by this author
Matt Champion Mika's LaundryAlkaline Trio Blood, Hair, and Eyeballs
Green Day SaviorsEmpty Country Empty Country II
Taking Back Sunday 152blink-182 One More Time...
user ratings (453)
3.4
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
August 11th 2019


47584 Comments

Album Rating: 4.1 | Sound Off

hard album to review. maybe that means it's good? I don't know anymore

PistolPete
August 11th 2019


5304 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Did you have to fight Sowing for the ability to review this? Lol is he sitting in the corner somewhere with his arms crossed and a massive frown?



Review is excellent btw. I always like how you balance talking about the music itself equally with what you think it’s trying to convey and communicate.

Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
August 11th 2019


47584 Comments

Album Rating: 4.1 | Sound Off

it was a brutal race to the dib and ngl some feelings were likely hurt. however he'll get even with me by rocking up with a far superior review in a few days time I'm sure!



thank you tho. appreciate the words

TalonsOfFire
Emeritus
August 11th 2019


20969 Comments

Album Rating: 3.9

Great review Rowan!

I like the vibes they went for even if there're some less than impressive moments, but like the new National, most of it is excellent and I appreciate all the layering and atmospheric flourishes. "Sh'Diah" is absolutely stunning.

MarsKid
Emeritus
August 11th 2019


21030 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

Nicely done my man. "This album plays as the sober morning after 22, A Million's headspin of a night out, the moment after waxing rhapsodic about the mysteries of life, death and religion when you fold your clothes and get on with the damn day" was a fun line.



I disagree, but you've made a good argument here.

Slex
August 11th 2019


16508 Comments


Man this review is so friggin great bud

Album continues to grow on me and confound me in equal measure. I will say after the initial shock of the fragmented songwriting (I still steadfastly assert this is more experimental than 22, though mostly all in the first half) there’s a very discernible and touching openness to this thing emotionally that is pretty compelling

luci
August 11th 2019


12844 Comments


we’ve converged to the same rating, this grows off me with each listen

Sowing
Moderator
August 11th 2019


43941 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Excellent review Rowan. This album isn't on the same level as his first three which pains me to say, but the dude is still in a class of his own. Faith, iMi, and Holyfields are breathtaking. It's a little too much more 22 a Million/Big Red Machine, would have liked to see a little more creativity, but he's still the Radiohead of indie folk so who am I to complain.

CosmicPie
August 11th 2019


2901 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Choo, I rated the last one 4.5. Love it. Sounds like I'll feel similar with this one.

Lord(e)Po)))ts
August 11th 2019


70239 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

Part of me feels like vernon is a bit desperate to rid himself of the depressing solemn reputation he made for himself early in his career and has begun overcompensating a little bit to come across as less self-serious. I kinda liked his last alb but some of the experimentation and conceptualization felt so unnatural, which is how I feel about the obnoxiously “spirited” moments on this one.

CosmicPie
August 11th 2019


2901 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Eh, but that's how being riddled with depression and anxiety actually is. You awkwardly try every which way to get out before you give in.



I haven't heard this yet, though. So I can't connect the dots.

Slex
August 11th 2019


16508 Comments


Wahhhhh wahhhhh cunty cunt bollocks wah-Zak’s sole contribution to the site

Slex
August 11th 2019


16508 Comments


I’m a consummate people pleaser

Sowing
Moderator
August 11th 2019


43941 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

"Did you have to fight Sowing for the ability to review this? Lol is he sitting in the corner somewhere with his arms crossed and a massive frown?"

IT'S ALL JUST SO STUPID OK CAN WE NOT TALK ABOUT IT JEEZ UGH

Slex
August 11th 2019


16508 Comments


Lmao

dmathias52
Staff Reviewer
August 11th 2019


1799 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Beautiful, beautiful review. I get the gripes that people have with the album for sure, but I love the joyful noise. I actually read a review that negatively referred to it as a hippie commune of music, which I think perfectly describes why I love it

benkim
August 11th 2019


4813 Comments


I will give this one a bit more time but I'm beginning to feel like I'm at the point where I've gotten over Bon Iver. Might not even bother checking out releases that will come after this.

CosmicPie
August 11th 2019


2901 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Harsh bros inc.

WatchItExplode
August 11th 2019


10450 Comments


One eyebrow raised the entire runtime of this thing...

Gyromania
August 11th 2019


37006 Comments


some of you guys are nuts this album is awesome. i think i might like it more than 22 tbh



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy