Big Thief – U.F.O.F.: New Album Review

Big Thief are an indie rock band with prominent folk and Americana influences. They’ve been prolific in their short career, with U.F.O.F. their third album in three years.

Big Thief are influenced by vintage folk-rock acts like The Band, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, and Fleetwood Mac; U.F.O.F. captures The Band’s aura of old time Americana and taps into the mystic folk aura of Van Morrison’s early solo records.

Big Thief are based in Brooklyn, although their backwoods sound is perhaps explained by songwriter Adrianne Lenker’s unusual experiences growing up; her family lived in a van after leaving a religious cult. Lenker is joined by Buck Meek on guitar and backup vocals, Max Oleartchik on bass, and James Krivchenia on drums.

Lenker’s haunting, near-whispering voice is reminiscent of Marianne Faithfull, and it carries gravitas. She’s often a detached observer, like this couplet from standout track ‘Cattails’.

Violet’s eyes, Violet plays
Going back home to the Great Lakes
Where the cattail sways
With the lonesome loon
Riding that train in late June

‘Cattails’ is performed by only half the band – Lenker accompanies herself adeptly on 12-string guitar, with only Krivchenia’s splashy drums for backup.

Opener ‘Contact’ ratchets up from the band’s usual introspective Indie folk into an intense coda of guitar riffing and screaming. More often the band sticks to introspective, mystic folk – the final F. in UFOF stands for friend.

It’s not the most immediate album, but U.F.O.F. is stunning, a record of almost limitless depth and character.

Big Thief have a fourth album due in October 2019 – Two Hands is described as the “celestial twin” to U.F.O.F..

Read More

19 Comments

    • I’d choose the word mellow rather than lacklustre. I haven’t spent much time with the others, but it does seem more subdued and stylistically marrow than their previous work?

  1. Very much a new convert to Big Thief – loved UFOF and picked up Capacity shortly after. This one reveals so much with every listen, it’s really hypnotic.

    PLUS they just announced another new album for this year too! Bonus 🙂

  2. “It’s not the most immediate album” is probably the best way to describe how I felt about it, but I need to spend more time with it. And I will. Then I’m gonna hit up the new one.

Leave a Reply

Read about the discographies of musical acts from the 1960s to the present day. Browse this site's review archives or enjoy these random selections:

More review pages

Counting Crows Album Reviews

Counting Crows formed in the Bay Area. Vocalist Adam Duritz...

James Taylor Album Reviews

With his warm voice, pretty guitar-picking, and introspective songwriting, James Vernon...

LCD Soundsystem

James Murphy’s LCD Soundsystem blurred the lines between electronic and...

1980s Album Reviews

The 1980s often get bad press, but they were full...

Kathleen Edwards Album Reviews

Kathleen Edwards was born in Ottawa but spent part of...

Snail Mail Album Reviews

Lindsey Jordan grew up in Baltimore also home to Beach...

I add new blog posts to this website every week. Browse the archives or enjoy these random selections:

More blog posts

10 Best Counting Crows Songs

Counting Crows bridged the gap between alternative and classic rock...

10 Best Vanessa Carlton Songs

Vanessa Carlton is largely known as a one-hit wonder. The...

10 Best Songs by The Byrds

The Byrds were one of the most significant American bands...

11 Best ABBA Songs

Swedish quartet ABBA were massively popular from the mid-1970s to...

The Decemberists Albums: Ranked from Worst to Best

The Decemberists rode the wave of early 21st-century Indie to...
The Decemberists Picaresque

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.