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Mitski | Be the Cowboy | Dead Oceans

Review: Mitski – Be the Cowboy

National Music Reviews

Mitski
Be the Cowboy

Dead Oceans
Street: 08.17
Mitski = St. Vincent + Fiona Apple + Pixies

Mitski’s last two albums, Bury Me at Makeout Creek and Puberty 2, took her from an artist whose name was known and discussed mostly within small indie circles into one of critical acclaim and popularity with her lyrical directness complemented by raw, straightforward guitar-led instrumentals. Her new album, Be The Cowboy, takes risks in moving beyond the sound that catapulted her career to new heights but, in doing so, feels like Mitski’s coming-out as a full-force pop star.

This isn’t to say that all of what everyone loved about Mitski is gone—the elements of rock are still there. The opening track, “Geyser,” explodes with a low, grungy rhythmic guitar that broods under the ascending synthesizers. Songs like “A Pearl” feature guitar crescendos that fans will find familiar but add some much welcomed horns and a more polished production value that wasn’t really present on Mitski’s last two projects.

Where Be The Cowboy shines most is in the moments where Mitski plays with sounds that she’s never used before or where she returns to influences that fans of her last two albums may be unaware she had in her previous work. Mitski’s first full-length, Lush, was a Fiona Apple-like piano pop record, and that influence seeps through in a magnificent way on “Me and My Husband.” “Lonesome Love” feels like a lost Angel Olsen B-side (in a good way, I promise), and the song “Nobody” is a straight-up 1970’s dance ballad that is about as infectious and emotionally poignant as a song of that genre can get.

And even more than the sonic growth, what makes this album so great is how effectively emotional the songs still are. Mitski has, incredibly, not sacrificed the personal nature of her songwriting for the new pop sheen. For this album, Mitski was influenced by fiction and narrative, and tried to write with some of those influences in mind. While this is certainly not a concept album or an album that follows a narrative with characters and story arcs, Be The Cowboy displays a woman grappling for control and finding herself unravelling emotionally in a world that’s both uncomfortable with women in control and condescending to women who express themselves when they feel like they’re losing control. Mitski does a masterful job of painting this picture.

The album closes with the beautiful “Two Slow Dancers.” As she sings of lost youth for that last couple on the dance floor, it is hard for me not to see the song as more than a wave goodbye to the people we used to be—it’s a wave goodbye to the Mitski of Bury Me at Makeout Creek and Puberty 2. She has evolved as an artist and a person, and no matter how hard that evolution may be, it is silly “to think that we could stay the same.”

The album’s title represents a certain confidence for Mitski, and Be The Cowboy—more than any of her previous records—feels assured. She has fully grabbed onto the control her protagonist is reaching for. Iggy Pop recently said on BBC 6 Radio that he believes Mitski is “the most advanced American songwriter that I know.” She is absolutely a rockstar—we know it, Iggy Pop apparently knows it, and on Be The Cowboy, Mitski has made it abundantly clear that she knows it, too. –Evan Welsh