Baltimore Sun

Beautiful voice given to global pain

- By Lindsay Zoladz

Do flower children still inhabit a dying planet? If temperatur­es keep rising, will there be anything left of the garden? On an increasing­ly ambitious series of records released over the past decade, Natalie Mering, who makes music under the name Weyes Blood, has sought answers to these riddles.

Mering is something of a Laurel Canyon revivalist, though Weyes Blood doesn’t traffic in simple nostalgia. Instead, the singer and songwriter, 34, resurrects, uncannily, the sound of late ’60s and early ’70s West Coast folk-rock to address more contempora­ry existentia­l crises and conflagrat­ions, like digital-era loneliness and climate change. “California’s my body, and your fire runs over me,” she sings on “Grapevine,” a highlight from her stunning new album “And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow.” That lyric, like many of Mering’s best, succinctly intertwine­s the personal sorrow of heartbreak with the shared tragedy of environmen­tal catastroph­e.

Mering’s distinct alto has the opalescenc­e of Karen Carpenter’s voice and the enveloping benevolenc­e of Cass Elliot’s, though as a songwriter she shares a certain millennial poeticism with Lana Del Rey. Mering’s perspectiv­e often zooms out and hovers over the pastoral landscapes of her songs like an elegant bird, but “Grapevine” — a chamber-pop slow-burner that carries its brass and string sections lightly — contains some cutting, down-toearth observatio­ns about an overconfid­ent man. “Emotional cowboy,”

Mering croons knowingly, “you stayed up all night, trying to beat up the moon.”

Over time, Mering has learned not only to trust her voice’s beauty, but also to depict beauty and even softness itself as a subversive tool. Many of the listeners she won over with her last album as Weyes Blood, 2019’s “Titanic Rising,” probably don’t know she got her start playing in experiment­al groups and noise bands. As Weyes Blood

— a moniker borrowed from a Flannery O’Connor novel — Mering has found different, and perhaps even more effective, ways of conjuring destructio­n. On the surface, “And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow” often sounds angelic (four of the 10 tracks feature harpist Mary Lattimore), but there’s a foreboding sense of apocalypse in the periphery.

What distinguis­hes the new album, which Mering produced with Jonathan Rado and Rodaidh McDonald, is the addition of a whole new boogeyman: mass isolation wrought by a pandemic. “We’re not meant to be our own angels all the time,” Mering sings on “The Worst Is Done,” atop incongruou­sly sunny guitar chords and bouncy percussion. “No one coming by to see if you’re alive.” Elsewhere, on the leadoff track “It’s Not Just Me, It’s Everybody,” she asks into an echoing void, “Has there ever been a time more revealing that the people are hurting?” That song, one of her best yet, begins as an AM-goldstyle piano ballad and ends up, in its rapturous conclusion, becoming the sonic equivalent of a group hug.

Mering’s music often revels in the plurality of its perspectiv­e; “we” is just as common a pronoun as “me.” Every so often, this imperative to speak big-tent truths can become strained and make her lyrics frustratin­gly vague, as on “Children of the Empire” (“We tend to live long, that’s why so many things go wrong”), but that song’s gorgeous vocal melody and Mering’s impassione­d performanc­e lift it beyond its limitation­s. Even Mering’s most on-the-nose pandemic song, “The Worst Is Done,” is most vivid when she’s singing about her individual experience: “I should’ve stayed with my family,” she sings, “I shouldn’t have stayed in my little place in the world’s loneliest city.”

That grounding in personal experience is what elevates a song like “Grapevine” or the more abstract “God Turn Me Into a Flower,” a minimalist, synth-driven meditation that becomes almost liturgical in its emotional power. “It’s good to be soft when they push you down,” Mering sings, clarion-like. Lyrically, it’s the album’s most singular and inward-focused song, but it is also a plea to transcend self-consciousn­ess and become one with nature. In the end, Mering gets her wish. For the last minute, her voice falls away and a chorus of chirping birds and whirring insects take over the vocal duties. However temporaril­y, she has become a more modern kind of flower child, sunk blissfully into the fecund earth that — at least for now — hasn’t yet been scorched beyond repair.

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