But this is not a mean or spiteful album. Itâs an album about getting comfortable in the discomfort. On the single âLike I Say (I runaway),â Yanya sings, âThe minute Iâm not in control/Iâm tearing up inside.â Itâs a line that would make a therapist simultaneously concerned yet proud of her self-awareness. In the music video, Yanya plays a runaway bride, an image perhaps a little too on the nose. But when she loses her veil and escapes, itâs not into someone elseâs arms, The Graduate-style, but into an empty field. She looks around at the trees, the sky. Nothing offers her an idea of her next move. She didnât bail because she had a better thing going, she just knew that what was in front of her wasnât right, and so she did something about it.
This bounding into the unknown is expressed throughout the album with light accent pieces, notably Joe Harvey-Whyteâs plaintively played pedal-steel guitar, which shows up on four tracks, and ClÃona Nà Choileáinâs august cello performance, which shows up on two. Neither instrument is over- or underutilized, and neither overwhelms the songs with anything florid. When Choileáinâs instrument enters towards the end of âMutations,â a song with a bit of an angsty constitution, it just feels like relief.
One of my favorite songs on My Method Actor is âBinding,â which may be the recordâs quietest. Itâs exemplary of the albumâs easy strength; her voice exudes confidence. Itâs a Sade-style miracle Yanyaâs singing pumps out such force while hardly ever needing to rise above a whisper. Matching her vocal performance, âBindingâ boils the instrumentation down to the bare bones, but nothing is lost. The song is made of not much more than a spare drum line, pedal steel, and folky strum of the guitar, while Yanya sings an impressionistic tale that is either about a car accident, getting high, or the end of a relationship. Maybe all three? She isnât sure. In a recent interview, Yanya said of the song, âI canât be too certain, but all the lyrics leading up to that are about someone being totally out of it, like theyâve drunk too much, or theyâre on this long drive and are not really present.â She says the songâs subject is âtrying to escape and get to this blissful nowhereness, of leaving their body behind.â
That sounds good, until you realize maybe it doesnât. Itâs nice to regard the soul, but on this journey to nirvana, does our earthly body not deserve some respect? Apparently not. On âMade Out of Memory,â Yanya, wispy and staccato, directly addresses this corporeal egress with some of the albumâs most threatening lyrics, knife to her own throat: âIâll dig my own grave/I donât give a fuck.â Another venomous moment. But one done with admirable self-acceptance, however troubled. The next line: âYou know Iâm not ashamed to jump in.â You have to believe her.
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