
Cat Power
Wanderer
(Domino)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
If there is one dependable feature about Cat Powerโs intermittently released albums, itโs that you donโt know which direction Chan Marshall is headed until you spin them.
So it is that 2013โs synth/electronics-drenched Sun was a far cry from her previous set of originals, 2006โs Memphis soul-infused The Greatest. After another extended five year wait, Marshall reverts back to her intimate singer-songwriter guise with Wanderer. The opening a cappela title track sets the introspective, stripped-down tone, a palette where the accompaniment is mostly only Marshallโs piano, guitar, stark percussion and hushed, emotionally naked voice. She gets vocal assistance from tour mate Lana Del Ray on first single โWoman,โ an empowering declaration of who she is with the lyrics โMy wordโs the only thing Iโve ever needed,โ atop sparse guitar, drums and subtle underlying strings. There are hints of Laura Nyro when Marshall accompanies herself with raw acoustic piano on โNothing Really Mattersโ (โWhen you see a face in the crowd with a look of obsession/ Thereโs no subtle way to say thereโs plenty of defense and discretionโ), and on her lovely, emotionally searing version of Rihannaโs โStay,โ the albumโs lone cover and one of its highlights.
The songs, according to Marshallโs notes, reflect her wandering spirit as they represent โthe course my life has taken in this journey-going from town to town, with my guitar, telling my tale โฆโ But thatโs just a vague structure since the lyrics are often as amorphous as the tunes. The most direct story is told in the lyrically profuse โBlackโ with Marshall playing spare guitar chords and overdubbing her voice on a tale of a complex relationship, tainted by the devil, with someone who seems to have abused her trust. Skeletal, primitive Velvet Underground-styled drums push the meditative โYou Getโ as she tells a friend โAnd you will live in the world, and youโll get what you get.โ
Marshallโs tenth studio album, in an erratic if fascinating 25-year career, is an intimate, multifaceted reflection of her always complex, frequently indistinct character. These often inscrutable songs offer kaleidoscopic glimpses into what seems like a complicated persona. They softly weave and twirl, eschewing traditional forms, both lyrically and musically, for a more unstructured style that will take a few listens to warm to. How much youโll learn about her wandering journey is unclear, but Marshallโs deeply introspective approach is worth spending time with to unravel the artistโs dense wandering spirit.
