Texarkana Gazette

Julien Baker “Little Oblivions” (Matador)

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Julien Baker commands attention on stage with just the sound of her voice and guitar. She’s expert at holding audiences rapt with unadorned, emotionall­y fraught songs that turn noisy concert halls into hushed, hallowed spaces.

In some ways, “Little Oblivions,” the 25-year-old Memphis songwriter’s third album, which is self-produced, feels like a departure from that approach.

The arrangemen­ts are fleshed out, with a grand, fullband sound she created playing most instrument­s herself. Her engineer, Calvin Lauber, also chipped in, and Phoebe Bridgers and Lucy Dacus, Baker’s bandmates in indie supergroup boygenius, contribute backup vocals.

But while the bigger sound offers Baker a barrier she could hide behind, she has no interest in shielding herself. The opening of the first song, “Hardline,” makes plain there’s extraordin­ary confession­al music ahead in which the singer will not be going easy on herself for choices she’s made.

“Blacked out on a weekday; is there something that I’m trying to avoid?” she sings, as the music swells. “Start asking for forgivenes­s in advance for all the future things I will destroy.”

“Little Oblivions” explores themes of addiction, its consequenc­es, and recovery. But Baker doesn’t do easy moralizing here. Both life and the music — which draws on Baker’s experience in punk bands — get messy. “Bloodshot” and “Relative Fiction” achieve a rare beauty. The songs are all the more harrowing because they confront demons once thought safely locked away. — Dan DeLuca, The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

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