Jump to content

Mayday (Myriam Gendron album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mayday
A green-tinted photo of Gendron reclining on a couch
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 10, 2024 (2024-05-10)
Genre
Length43:49
LanguageEnglish, French
LabelFeeding Tube Records/Thrill Jockey
Myriam Gendron chronology
Ma délire – Songs of Love, Lost and Found
(2021)
Mayday
(2024)

"When I came home, I had all this grieving to do. I hadn't really had time for it. May is such a beautiful month, especially here where winters are so long. But she was dying. So there was this contradiction between how you should feel and how you really feel,"

—Myriam Gendron on being a caretaker for her mother, the impetus for the songs on Mayday[2]

Mayday is a 2024 studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter Myriam Gendron. It has received positive reviews from critics and features original lyrics about Gendron's mother's death, environmentalism, and lullabyes.[3]

Reception

[edit]

According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Mayday received "universal acclaim" based on a weighted average score of 82 out of 100 from 7 critic scores.[4] In Exclaim!, Vish Kanna rated this release an 8 out of 10, stating that the "weary and uncompromising" songs on it are "about the foundational elements we work with whenever we must rebuild our ruined selves".[5] Editors at Pitchfork scored this release 7.7 out of 10, and Linnie Greene stated that "there are moments on Mayday that feel essential, plucked out of the ether as if they've always existed", with Gendron "reenvisioning what's timeless for this precise moment".[6] Bruce Miller of PopMatters gave Mayday a 7 out of 10, stating that Gendron has shown growth as a performer since her previous albums.[7] In Spin, Reed Jackson rated Mayday an A–, stating that Gendron's exploration of a proper recording studio and several backing musicians enhanced the music on this release and "With her remarkable voice—slippery, shadowy, haunted by the ghost of itself—and dolorous melodic sensibility, Gendron renders whatever she's feeling (grief, awe, bittersweet joy) as a complex continuum. Her songs are always jubilant and despairing, resolute and unmoored, hopeless and stubbornly persistent all at once."[1]

In a May 31 roundup of the best albums of the year, editors at Exclaim! ranked this 23, with Daniel Sylvester calling the music a mix of "Shenandoah" and Sebadoh.[8] A June 4 overview of the best albums of the year so far at Stereogum included Mayday at 24 and James Rettig wrote that Gendron "pulls from traditional folk songs and other people's poems and blends them in with a mythic imagery all her own, and she's bolstered by master-class musicians that build out the uncomplicated pure centers of her songs".[9]

Track listing

[edit]
  1. "There Is No East or West" – 5:02
  2. "Long Way Home" – 4:02
  3. "Terres brûlées" – 6:13
  4. "Dorothy's Blues" – 2:38
  5. "La Luz" – 2:50
  6. "La belle Françoise (pour Sylvie)" – 6:46
  7. "Lully Lullay" – 4:29
  8. "Look Down That Lonesome Road" – 4:12
  9. "Quand j'étais jeune et belle" – 2:39
  10. "Berceuse" – 4:04

Personnel

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Jackson, Reed (May 16, 2024). "The Exquisite Agony of Myriam Gendron". Spin. ISSN 0886-3032. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  2. ^ Kelly, Jennifer (May 13, 2024). "Absolutely No Strategy: How Myriam Gendron's Lovely Music Found Its Audience". Features. Bandcamp Daily. Bandcamp. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  3. ^ Locke, Jesse (May 7, 2024). "Myriam Gendron Interview: Montréal Singer On New Album 'Mayday'". Q&A. Stereogum. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  4. ^ "Mayday by Myriam Gendron Reviews and Tracks – Metacritic". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. n.d. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  5. ^ Kanna, Vish (May 9, 2019). "Myriam Gendron's 'Mayday' Speaks to the Future and the Past". Exclaim!. ISSN 1207-6600. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  6. ^ Greene, Linnie (May 16, 2024). "Myriam Gendron: Mayday Review". Albums. Pitchfork. Condé Nast. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  7. ^ Miller, Bruce (May 21, 2024). "Myriam Gendron Hovers Between Balladry and Freer Spaces". Reviews. PopMatters. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  8. ^ Sylvester, Daniel (May 31, 2024). "Exclaim!'s 25 Best Albums of 2024 So Far". Exclaim!. ISSN 1207-6600. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  9. ^ Rettig, James (June 4, 2024). "The 50 Best Albums Of 2024 So Far". Stereogum. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
[edit]