PJ Harvey
I Inside the Old Year Dying


4.2
excellent

Review

by Sunnyvale STAFF
July 11th, 2023 | 92 replies


Release Date: 07/07/2023 | Tracklist

Review Summary: So look behind, look before, life knocking at death’s door

I’ve always been fascinated by the origins of the neofolk genre. The idea that industrial music, the musical style generally regarded as the most mechanical and least earthy of all, could birth an at-least partial “return” to the sense of closeness-to-the-soil and cultural inheritance which folk music is broadly supposed to possess, has always seemed to me to signal something important about human nature, even if exactly what conclusion to draw from it should be the subject for another day, or at least for someone smarter than me to expound upon.

The opening paragraph shouldn’t be misconstrued to assume that PJ Harvey’s first record in seven years dives into neofolk. Spoiler alert, it does not. But a similar melding of the modern (a sonic canvass very suited to 21st-century art pop and constant Elvis references) and the archaic (a rustic vibe and a lyrical sensibility out of the 15th-century) is very much at the intriguing heart of I Inside The Old Year Dying. All together, Harvey’s latest isn’t particularly inaccessible on the surface, but there’s a lot to explore if one chooses, with the (Middle English-heavy) lyrics full of cryptic meaning.

Overall, I Inside The Old Year Dying achieves the sort of poetic autumnal quality which the album title seems to hint at. The songs tend to be fairly slow, prone to gentle rhythms reminiscent of the easy rocking of a boat on water, but the mood varies from place to place, occasionally feeling positively sunny, at other times moving into a witchy and moody creepiness. Harvey’s vocals are the critical component, always entrancing but delivering a remarkable emotional range - from the angelic yearning of “Lwonesome Tonight” to the aggressive urgency of the cacophonous closer “A Noiseless Noise”. Musically, too, there’s a lot of diversity. Opener “Prayer At The Gate” plays a critical role in setting the album’s mood with its eerie feel and Harvey’s unrelenting “doo, doo, doo” vocalizations echoing, while the brief title track offers a more abrasive instrumental palette. Meanwhile, in the album’s latter half, “A Child’s Question, August” offers stately grace as a piano-led piece, while its counterpart “ A Child’s Question, July” dips into menacing and futuristic territory. Throughout, I Inside The Old Year Dying proves resistant to parsing - if it’s often openly pretty and occasionally immensely profound, there always seems to be another layer to dissect.

Within the panorama of Harvey’s expanding discography (now ten LPs deep), I Inside The Old Year Dying represents a new chapter, but one that feels comfortable within her latter-day output. Sure, if a ‘90s rock fan woke up from a coma today and threw this album on expecting a companion piece to the grungy notes of Rid Of Me, he or she would be very confused, but these songs feel much more in tune with those of Let England Shake (albeit far less openly political in nature) or White Chalk (indeed, the most obvious sonic predecessor here). In the end, though, this record is different, as befits the restless creative spirit Harvey has reliably demonstrated - here, she wields a gnarled out-of-time essence, seeing a woodsy charm meet modern recording techniques. Frankly, the results lead to a very weird album, and ten or so listens in, there’s plenty more for me to plumb from its depths. It’s a mark of the record’s quality that said plumbing is providing a very rewarding task, and as a piece of esoteric yet engrossing art, I Inside The Old Year Dying marks one of Harvey’s finest creations yet.



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user ratings (105)
3.6
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
Sunnyvale
Staff Reviewer
July 11th 2023


5854 Comments

Album Rating: 4.2

Hard album to write about, but a very good one.

ArsMoriendi
July 11th 2023


40965 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Hello, I’m the biggest PJ Harvey fan on this site and I just wanna say, good rating

ArsMoriendi
July 11th 2023


40965 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Also good review even if it fails to mention the album’s best song Nether-edge

greatrevealer
July 11th 2023


7 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

goddess of alternative has returned, great record

fogza
Contributing Reviewer
July 11th 2023


9753 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Good review, perhaps I'll try again tomorrow

ArsMoriendi
July 11th 2023


40965 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Give yourself album Stockholm syndrome

mkmusic1995
Contributing Reviewer
July 11th 2023


1727 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

"hard album to write about, but a very good one."



I was trying so hard to come up with the words for this one and write my own review but it just wasn't happening. That said, you did a wonderful job really narrowing the focus of what makes this album awesome!

rabidfish
July 11th 2023


8690 Comments


it's like a handful of loose impressions and sketches. And yea, PJ's genre has always been folk music, don't matter what it sounds like.

ArsMoriendi
July 11th 2023


40965 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Idk if I’d call Dry folk

rabidfish
July 11th 2023


8690 Comments


folk ethos. it's been always there, some way or the other.

Sowing
Moderator
July 11th 2023


43943 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Quality review. This album is very subtle but contains a lot of beauty.

ArsMoriendi
July 12th 2023


40965 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Autumn Term is so good

ArsMoriendi
July 12th 2023


40965 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Lwonesome Tonight is so weird, mixes references between Elvis and Jesus



Also apparently this entire album heavily incorporates Dorset (a region of England)'s slang which is apparently where PJ Harvey is from

DePlazz
July 12th 2023


4486 Comments


First listen was very good.

dedex
Staff Reviewer
July 12th 2023


12785 Comments

Album Rating: 2.9 | Sound Off

wasn't really convinced by my first listen. great read tho!

Demon of the Fall
July 12th 2023


33647 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I have mixed feelings on this so far, it definitely is quite nice but not sure my imagination is totally captured yet. Fleeting levels of engagement.

fogza
Contributing Reviewer
July 12th 2023


9753 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I can get the love for this one, but after a few listens today I don't think I'll spend much more time with it, just not my favourite incarnation of her sound. It's a pretty record though.

TheWatchman71
July 12th 2023


342 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5 | Sound Off

I was just reading a very interesting debate on another PJ album thread about the issue of lyrics, music, intention behind said lyrics and if the music and lyrics can and should be separated - this new album I think is a prime example of where the lyrics are so fundamental to the life of an album - the narrative, the characters, the events, and that all of the 12 songs here have been removed from her prose-poem Orlam so steeped in old world Dorset dialect, local folklore and her own Dorset childhood - that it would be remiss to not at least make an effort to enhance ones’s experience of the music album by not spending some time to appreciate or understand the lyrics.



But neither is it essential - this is music after all. And so taking everything just as it’s heard - this feels like if Is This Desire and White Chalk had a baby. I’m enjoying this a lot, with just a few songs that I’m not entirely keen on, but once I’ve established a solid idea about how I feel about the album, I’m going to reward PJ’s artistic endeavour and actually read her poem.

ArsMoriendi
July 12th 2023


40965 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Also she mentions femboys on The Neither-Edge, which is hilarious



Are femboys from Old Dorset slang or did her featuring actor guest Ben Wishaw tell her to say that

hamid95
July 12th 2023


1186 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

i have no idea how someone like pj harvey would've found out about femboys if not through having ben whishaw as a friend.



also



'this feels like if Is This Desire and White Chalk had a baby'



hard agree



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