Father John Misty Waltzes Through Folkloric Wisdom on Mahashmashana
Josh Tillman’s sixth record might be the healthiest and most wisecrack-laden thesis on the circle of life in recent memory.

Father John Misty has little to say about his new record, Mahashmashana. “After a decade being born, Josh Tillman is finally busy dying,” reads a statement about the balladeer behind the Father John Misty moniker. A better description might be “Josh Tillman is taking his sweet time dying.” And would it be a terrible thing to say that it sounds wonderful?
Tillman’s sixth album processes life’s finite quality as something neutral, not reveling in the end of the nightmare, nor cowering at the unknown, but dancing with the natural order of things through songs that often stretch past the eight and nine minute mark. To maintain that balance, he filters the album’s folkloric wisdom through mood swings, narrating with dissociative curiosity (“Being You”), numbed-up existentialism (“Screamland”) and reluctant nostalgia (“Summer’s Gone”).
Notice the absence of outright sadness: God’s Favorite Customer, Tillman’s 2018 work tracing the fractures of a relationship, is more crestfallen by a mile, and large portions of its predecessor, Pure Comedy, certainly feel more pessimistic. Mahashmashana might be the healthiest and most wisecrack-laden thesis on the circle of life in recent memory. The album extends Tillman’s repertoire of lush string sections and sprightly, folk-adjacent rock, although both sounds embrace a new purpose by underscoring Tillman’s grab bag of oral tradition. Darting strings dramatize the verses of “Josh Tillman and the Accidental Dose,” while a groove carved from piano and saxophone chugs “I Guess Time Just Makes Fools Of Us All” through its mighty runtime of eight minutes and 36 seconds.