Jerskin Fendrix Polishes Grief With Ugly Indulgences On Once Upon A Time… In Shropshire
The composer and singer-songwriter’s second album—full of humor, tragedy, and family history—is a proper soundtrack for a proper crashout.

Sometimes grief is a stupid, inappropriate joke at a wake; or a scream in the middle of a restaurant. It can be ugly; it’s grotesque, rude, and unwelcome; but it’s also an important part to understanding and, more importantly, appreciating life. Rarely then do we have an album that exquisitely captures all dimensions of this feeling—one that revels in the most grotesque forms of coping yet celebrates the beauty of the people, animals, and nature that surrounds its narrator. Jerskin Fendrix’s sophomore record, Once Upon A Time… In Shropshire, is equal parts ode and eulogy. Set in his rural hometown of Shropshire, England, the songs dramatize a true and personal story: the death of a friend, family members, and ultimately, Fendrix’s father within a brief moment in this place’s ancient history.
It’s a complete departure from Fendrix’s debut five years ago: Winterreise, an experimental pop album drowned in Auto-Tune and electronic production to transform post-breakup angst into a 21st-Century take on Schubert’s romantic-era song cycle. Shropshire instead returns to Fendrix’s roots as a composer. The songs’ trilling pianos and delicate violins—interrupted only briefly by stormy band crash outs (“Jerskin Fendrix Freestyle”) and electronic explosions (“Princess”, “Sk1”) —are musically warm and inviting like a film score for a period piece set in the countryside. Fendrix notably relies entirely on his raw vocals to drive the emotional performance of confronting his grief, allowing him to explore its lowest depths and highest peaks to offer theatricality and a rougher texture to the overall sound. Yet, like its predecessor, Shropshire arrives at sincerity in a complicated way: by burying expressions of profound sadness underneath a mound of superficial one-liners, delivering the most gutting lines in a straining falsetto, or just shielding his loudest thoughts behind a post-rock frenzy.
“Beth’s Farm” is a plucky, sunny introduction of a lovely, provincial town. It’s a lullaby of sorts, with Fendrix reminiscing about farm animals, holiday get-togethers, first kisses, and growing families in a sweet, high-pitched, falsetto. “I’ve never felt so in love until now,” he sings, complementing his cheeriness with the joyful, filmic quality of a violin, piano, and snappy, synthesized harmonies echoing throughout. But Fendrix skillfully refrains from diving too deep into nostalgia—opting, instead, to crack at the gilded coating of a happy childhood. Death, even when it’s supposedly not present, is all he dwells on: “There’s no pain here / There’s no blood here.” Desperation then grows as he shifts into the chorus, dropping his voice to get louder and less controlled, even cracking as he repeats, “Nobody dies on Beth’s Farm!” The subtle eeriness of this song, particularly in the way an artist with such a deep register contorts his voice to achieve that falsetto, effectively articulates how tragedy can warp one’s perception of life.