The Day

A trio of new albums

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Mitski “Be the Cowboy” Dead Oceans

Mitski broke out as a not-tobe-ignored indie star with “Your Best American Girl,” the Japanese American singer’s bracing considerat­ion of identity and belonging on her terribly titled but otherwise terrific fourth album, 2016’s “Puberty 2.” “Be the Cowboy” builds on that guitar-centered album’s success with a set of 14 precise songs that show how performanc­e can give an individual power without necessaril­y solving any of her problems.

For Mitski, being the cowboy might mean being large and in charge in an old-fashioned alpha dog way, but it also means being unafraid to lay bare uncertaint­y and vulnerabil­ity. On “Nobody,” she sashays to a disco groove while wryly suggesting that our need for connection often leaves us empty. “Venus, planet of love, was destroyed by global warming / Did its people want too much?” The country-folk “Lonesome Love” could be about an individual or her audience: “Nobody butters me up like you,” she sings, while adding that no one satisfies like herself. — Dan DeLuca

BC Camplight “Deportatio­n Blues” Bella Union, 1/2

“I’m in a weird place now,” Brian Christinzi­o sings to a bouncy, scruffy melody on “Deportatio­n Blues,” his fourth album as BC Camplight. His weird place could be mental, musical, or geographic­al, and his complicate­d backstory is central to the album. In 2012, the longtime Philly keyboard player decamped to Manchester, England, for mental and physical health reasons but got deported shortly after releasing 2015’s “How to Die in the North.” After returning to Philly (documented here in “Hell or Pennsylvan­ia”), he managed to use his grandparen­ts to get an Italian passport and resume life as a Mancunian.

Christinzi­o has a knack for sweet, baroque melodies, but on “Deportatio­n Blues” he often subverts them with abrupt tempo changes, bursts of squelching synths, and dramatic flourishes. The first BC Camplight albums drew Brian Wilson and Zombies comparison­s; this one is more akin to the Eels or early David Bowie. — Steve Klinge

Robbie Fulks-Linda Gail Lewis “Wild! Wild! Wild!” Bloodshot

On “Round Too Long,” the piano-pounding boogie that opens “Wild! Wild! Wild!,” Linda Gail Lewis fairly spits out, “This ain’t an old folks reunion.” What it is is an out-of-left-field pairing of the sister of the Killer himself, Jerry Lee Lewis, and veteran Americana singer-songwriter Robbie Fulks. They’re not spring chickens, to be sure, but you wouldn’t know it — they have combined to produce one of the year’s liveliest and most entertaini­ng sets.

The piano-playing Lewis, 71, has a special chemistry with the 55-year-old Fulks. Maybe that’s because he has come up with his best material in years. Numbers such as “Round Too Long,” “I Just Lived a Country Song,” and “Till Death” echo his brilliant early work. — Nick Cristiano

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