The Lowdown: Since the 2015 release of Grimesâ fourth album, Art Angels, Claire Boucher has stayed busy. She started dating tech mogul Elon Musk, streamed Bloodborne with Purity Ringâs Megan James, worked with Janelle MonaĂ© and Bring Me the Horizon, and most recently, became pregnant with her first child. Grimes had also been clashing with her record label, 4AD, to let her release new music a couple of years ago. Five years later, she has released the follow-up to her poppiest record yet with her darkest record yet, Miss_Anthrop0cene. After deeming Art Angels a âpiece of crapâ and âa stain on [her] life,â itâs clear that Grimes wanted to make something different than anything sheâs done before. Miss_Anthrop0cene comes across as her most ambitious work yet, and that ambition pays off.
The Good: Each of Miss_Anthrop0ceneâs 10 tracks is an embodiment of mortality and how humankind is inching ever closer to extinction. Consequently, itâd be impossible to not discuss climate change in the midst of this. Miss_Anthrop0cene is both a play on words (a combination of âmisanthropeâ and âAnthropoceneâ) as well as the protagonist of the recordâs narrative, who Grimes describes as an âanthropomorphic Goddess of climate change.â The single âViolenceâ centers on an abusive relationship between Earth and humanity. âYou wanna make me bad, pay me back,â she sings over a synth-heavy, four-on-the-floor dance beat. Itâs a clever depiction of the not-so-natural disasters caused by human activity. âBefore the feverâ revolves around finding love in imminent death, and its title track also hints at Earthâs rising temperatures. âThis is the sound of the end of the world,â Grimes sings in a reverb-drenched lower register. Some songs explore death in a different light, such as the guitar-centric âDelete Foreverâ, on which Grimes laments the victims of the opioid epidemic as a strummed acoustic guitar and finger-picked banjo accompany her.
Miss_Anthrop0ceneâs instrumentation finds itself at the crossroads of both Visions and Art Angels. It merges the darker ethos of the former while adopting the dance-esque rhythms of the latter. âDarkseidâ acts a perfect microcosm with its boisterous 808s and eerie tapestries of synths. However, thatâs not to say that Grimes doesnât tread new territory. â4ĂMâ combines Bollywood-inspired melodies with drum and bass, âDelete Foreverâ incorporates folk, Britpop, and dance, and âMy Name Is Darkâ meshes nu-metal with indie rock. Despite this amalgamation of genres, Miss_Anthrop0cene never feels unfocused. Everything is tied together through its thematic material, impeccable layering, and stellar production.
The Bad: Occasionally the aspirations of Miss_Anthrop0cene overstay their welcome, but only briefly. Tracks such as opener âSo Heavy I Fell Through the Earthâ and closer âIDORUâ drag on a bit toward the end, but it seldom detracts from the albumâs sharp songwriting. As impressive as Art Angelsâ pop sensibilities are, itâs also welcoming to hear Grimes take more risks in her musicâs structure and composition.
The Verdict: Grimes has never sounded more sure of herself than on Miss_Anthrop0cene, and this conviction in her ideas and creative outlook largely benefits this record. By consolidating the stylistic elements of her previous two works, Miss_Anthrop0cene lies at the intersections of Grimesâ past experiments while forging something entirely new to her discography. Miss_Anthrop0cene is the perfect Grimes record for 2020, delving into topical themes such as climate change with an eclectic mix of genres. Itâs certainly her darkest, most ambitious project yet, and it works on nearly all levels.
Essential Tracks: âDelete Foreverâ, âViolenceâ, and âMy Name Is Darkâ
Album Review: Grimes Finds a Creative Spark on the Magnificent Miss_Anthrop0cene
Matt Melis