Blunt Chunks Transcends Cliché on The Butterfly Myth
The Toronto singer-songwriter’s debut LP weaves a compelling story through expertly layered indie twang.

The butterfly—papillon in French, schmetterling in German—is a creature so beguiling that tall tales naturally emanate from its glowing wings. It can get daunting to encounter yet another work of art that engages with the butterfly as a symbol of transformation. Yet on The Butterfly Myth, Caitlin Woelfle-O’Brien’s first full-length as Blunt Chunks, she toys with butterfly imagery at the cellular level: When caterpillars approach the inflection point of metamorphosis, their body instinctually resists the initial transformation of caterpillar cells to butterfly cells, treating them like a foreign entity and placing the life form at risk. It’s this uglier, less-linear story that Woelfle-O’Brien latched onto when writing the songs that would become The Butterfly Myth. That distinct approach is almost as refreshing as the music she and her collaborators produce. Across nine tracks, The Butterfly Myth is an arresting dream-folk album, duly ornamented while Woelfle-O’Brien’s voice leads the charge—adding some much-needed pizzazz to the at-times tired contemporary canon of soft, twangy rock.
The Butterfly Myth is rich in texture, not in the least because of the distinct instrumental choices deployed to support Woelfle-O’Brien’s levitating voice. Opener “Fill My Cup” starts with slow, weighty drumming, liberal tambourine usage and a little fuzzy guitar before fading away as Woelfle-O’Brien sings over a bed of keys and steel—adding just the right balance of punctuation and flourish needed to uplift her voice. Living somewhere between the softness of Sampha’s voice and the breadth of Aerial East’s, Woelfle-O’Brien’s voice suits the pensive soft rank lane that Blunt Chunks inhabits. Bolstered with layers at key moments and backup from singer Quinn Bates, the vocals breathe incredible emotion into heartfelt yet plain spoken lyrics. Feelings of anticipation, devotion, avoidance, despondence are all there, delivered with nuanced tricks of affectation and instrumentation that signal distinction but proximity. She cannot escape feeling all these in one body; neither can her listener.
On a dime, Woelfle-O’Brien embraces progress after wilting in passivity on the propulsive “Psyche’s Flight.” While the drums and saxophone move with a gusto, she sounds reticent. A specter of doubt hangs over the song, granting it a postmodern interiority that stands out among other pep-talk indie hits. That doubt manifests in the mood cycle found on “High Hopes.” Blunt Chunks’ representation of gradual, mounting tension and soulful releases that come from navigating loaded communiques are striking: We’re used to hearing Woelfle-O’Brien’s vocals drift plaintively; it’s on “High Hopes” where we’re introduced to the singer who can throw her voice like an axe, slicing through the soft veneer of tambourine and pedal steel: “I realize that it’s senseless, you didn’t even ask about my day / In the morning I was lovin’ you, now I’m just angry.”