Album Reviews

St. Vincent: MASSEDUCTION

St. Vincent
MASSEDUCTION
(Loma Vista)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

When St. Vincent announced the release of her fifth album MASSEDUCTION, Annie Clark held a surreal mock press conference detailing the themes of the album and that the album was pronounced โ€œmass seduction,โ€ and not โ€œmass education.โ€ She also joked that she contemplated calling it โ€œAss Education,โ€ which seems oddly appropriate given that thereโ€™s a bright pink ass in a thong on the cover.

The first single from MASSEDUCTION, โ€œNew York,โ€ is an entirely different story. A tender ballad about the loss of someone close, it reads like a breakup song: โ€œYouโ€™re the only motherfucker in the city who can stand me,โ€ Clark sings. Yet in a line like โ€œI have lost a hero, I have lost a friend,โ€ she could just as easily be speaking to a figure like the late David Bowie, whom Clark has spoken about as a personal hero. In either situation, it feels genuine and anguished, almost the complete opposite of the surreal, garish image that Clark displays as St. Vincent.

MASSEDUCTION is in many ways a complicated struggle between St. Vincent the art project and Annie Clark the human being. Sometimes the lines are easy to draw โ€” the critique of an unforgiving L.A. on โ€œLos Agelessโ€ and the sing-songy drug critique โ€œPillsโ€ are more commentary than personal reflection. Yet Clark doesnโ€™t spare herself from that commentary, her admission โ€œI canโ€™t turn off what turns me onโ€ in the noisily dance-friendly title track evidence of her own complicity in what she sees as an instant gratification society as first explored in โ€œDigital Witness.โ€

The album is far more interesting when Clark is more introspective, pleading โ€œplease donโ€™t hang up yetโ€ on the gorgeous โ€œHang On Me,โ€ or simply showcasing her noisiest guitar riffs on โ€œYoung Lover.โ€ Whether itโ€™s Clark the badass shredder or Clark the sensitive soul weโ€™re hearing, itโ€™s always preferable to the distant conceptual figure she sometimes leans back on.