Having established herself as one of indie rock's premier shredders,
Marnie Stern returns with an emphasis on songcraft on her rhapsodic fourth album,
The Chronicles of Marnia. While
Stern still delights in plenty of the lightning-fast guitar heroics with which she's made a name for herself, the album feels like a more open and exploratory affair. Part of this can be attributed to a change in personnel, with
Hella and
Death Grips drummer
Zach Hill being replaced by
Oneida's Kid Millions, providing a looser, more fluid contrast to
Hill's technical wizardry. With this less tightly wound rhythm section behind her, the songs here seem to open up into rousing rock & roll mini-celebrations rather than musical endurance tests. This shift gives
The Chronicles of Marnia a new dimension of accessibility without sacrificing too much of its complexity. Rather than feeling like
Stern isn't putting in the effort, though, it's more fair to say that at this point she's not as concerned with trying so hard to impress us, instead floating from song to song with a breezy effortlessness that showcases a confident songwriter who isn't afraid to let the hooks do some of the heavy lifting this time around. That said, anyone expecting this to be yet another twisting sonic puzzle might be a little disappointed by the more direct approach here, but like
Stern's other albums,
The Chronicles of Marnia is an album that demands multiple journeys through the wardrobe, only this time it's to fully take in the album's melodic depths rather than to make sense of its technical achievements. ~ Gregory Heaney