The 10 Best Joanna Newsom Songs
Photo by Annabel Mehran
It’s only been 13 years since Joanna Newsom’s debut LP The Milk-Eyed Mender but she is already firmly established as one of the preeminent songwriters working today. The warning signs are all there—an immediately recognizable and totally inimitable style, the respect her contemporaries, an uncompromising vision that eschews traditional pop, and enough commercial success to allow her to follow her calling on her own terms.
Most of all, Newsom makes music that is both challenging enough to reward continuous study and beautiful enough to impress on the first listen. Following The Milk-Eyed Mender, Newsom returned with a dramatic, gauntlet-tossing vision with Ys. She then self-produced yet another major work—her best so far—with the triple LP Have One on Me, a collection that confirmed unique songwriting. The continued craft on 2015’s Divers shows an instrumentalist, composer and lyricist of profound artistry.
Newsom’s best songs may well still be in front of her. Still, here are 10 of the most technically accomplished and otherworldly tracks she’s released thus far.
10. “Peach, Plum, Pear”
This is a particularly cutting song from album full of them, her classic debut LP. “I have read the right book / to interpret your look. / You were knocking me down / with the palm of your eye,” she sings, as if intimated. But while the lyrics paint someone who is “blue and unwell,” her bracing delivery makes it clear she doesn’t stay flustered for long, if at all. When the clustered, multi-tracked vocals come in they sound less like a choir than a gang there to back her up; or, rather, she’s there to back herself up.
9. “Sapokanikan”
This standout track from Divers shows off Newsom’s tremendous ability to weave the mythical with the personal, all while maintaining a formally precise lyrical scheme. The instrumentation flows easily between keys and bells with an exuberant, bright bounce. Drums slip in and out, of the mix, too, more a featured texture than a beat. Yet, the driving force is Newsom’s percussive lyrics. The combination is deeply literary and allusive.
8. “Monkey & Bear”
One of Ys’ most intriguing and rewarding pieces is this twisting, richly detailed narrative. Van Dyke Parks’ production, complementing Newsom’s own jaunty harp composition, is like a film soundtrack—shading the lyrical content with various moods that range from excitement to confusion to mourning in conjunction with the story. The song takes on a mythical cast, but if Newsom is delivering a parable, she leaves it to the listener to determine the moral of the story.
7. “Leaving the City”
A hint (and sometimes a lot more than a hint) of a Renaissance aesthetic runs through much of Newsom’s work, and that theme is in full flower here. But this track from Divers is most notable for the crazy creative vocal phrasings she brings on the tune’s head-spinning middle section.