The Guardian (USA)

Mitski review – unusual, enigmatic and utterly compelling

- Katie Hawthorne

A curtain hangs centre stage, as if set for a magician’s disappeari­ng act. Mitski, barely visible in a black dress and tights, gazes at it longingly before ducking behind it. Her silhouette is thrown on to the drapes, frozen like a shadow puppet, as she opens with Everyone, a muted track which speaks, crypticall­y, about the American artist’s relationsh­ip to music, listeners and dark bargaining­s of success. The song ends, the curtain drops, and the “show” begins.

Mitski Miyawaki is no stranger to theatrics – the indie rock musician’s live performanc­es have grown increasing­ly conceptual since the break-out success of 2018’s Be the Cowboy and her subsequent three-year hiatus from the music industry. But this tour, in honour of her celebrated seventh album The Land Is Inhospitab­le and So Are We, perfects her unusual, enigmatic, utterly compelling stagecraft.

A self-contained, circular stage becomes a cabaret, a circus, a boxing ring, a cage. Her scalding songs are deployed like controlled explosions, glassily distanced by ingenious lighting and repetitive, gestural choreograp­hy. This artful, refined act offers neither catharsis nor release, and instead draws pointed attention to Mitski’s ability to play any role – the clown, the lover, the outcast, the villain.

The set spans a decade of music from five albums, rearranged to suit the new album’s pastoral and sometimes gothic Americana. Pedal steel, fiddle and accordion from Nashvilleb­ased musician Fats Kaplin bring out unexpected qualities in older songs (the frosty, frantic, 1980s-indebted Love Me More becomes earthy and eerie) and creates a gravitatio­nal pull towards her newer material. Heaven sees her waltz longingly with a beam of light, dizzied by keys and cymbals, while the strummed I’m Your Man swells into a murder ballad. “You believe me like a God, I betray you like a man,” she croons, straight-faced, while lights flicker like a seance.

She bounds back for an encore, with the broad grin of a Broadway star, to deliver Nobody, the biggest hit from Be the Cowboy. Here’s the big finish, she concedes, but this mercurial, magnificen­t show is designed to both please and unsettle. A master of tension, no one else can play this role like Mitski.

 ?? ?? No stranger to theatrics … Mitski’s performanc­es have grown increasing­ly conceptual. Photograph: Katherine Anne Rose/The Observer
No stranger to theatrics … Mitski’s performanc­es have grown increasing­ly conceptual. Photograph: Katherine Anne Rose/The Observer

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