Mac DeMarco Plays Guitar and Not Much Else
On his wistful, acoustic-heavy sixth album, the Canadian rocker strips his sound down to its barest elements, but the minimalist approach doesn’t quite play to his strengths.

Ever since the woozy, lo-fi indie rock of his mini-album debut Rock and Roll Night Club put him on the map, Mac DeMarco has consistently had a knack for balancing the light with the heavy. Underneath his buoyant, transgressive sense of humor and affable, goofball nature lies a soulful observer who finds the sublime and melancholy in the mundane, whether it’s in a love song about his favorite brand of cigarettes, a pensive existential wrestle with time, or a strikingly honest musing about turning into his father.
But naturally, over time, DeMarco has grown up a bit, dialing down his sillier impulses and leaning harder into the meditative, nomadic side of his personality. In doing so, the appeal of his easygoing Canadian charm has waned, and his subsequent records have suffered a bit from aimlessness. Take, for instance, 2019’s tedious Here Comes the Cowboy or 2023’s instrumental-only Five Easy Hot Dogs or the 9-hour hard-drive dump One Wayne G, the latter of which felt less like a gargantuan treasure trove of unreleased demos and more like a bloated, intermittently compelling compilation of outtakes.
It’s hard to discern the exact root of this gradual downgrade in the variety of DeMarco’s work, but it could stem from a combination of things: aging, a minimized pressure to prove himself, or an admirable attempt to find peace in sobriety. Whatever the case, a longtime fan such as myself half-hopes DeMarco still has some of that original spark in him, even if the culture has sort of moved past the slacker-hipster aesthetic that defined his initial image and sound a decade ago.
DeMarco’s sixth and latest LP, Guitar, offers fragments of that spark, but not quite enough to fully reignite the possibility that he still has something new or interesting to say. The album’s austere production and lean scope are certainly a welcome relief from the meandering spirit that animated DeMarco’s more recent outputs. But even though he’s shown an acuity in taking a homespun idea and transforming it into slice-of-life poetry, Guitar plays things a bit too safe. It’s a modest, earnest, downtempo, acoustic-heavy record and doesn’t seem to mind being as simple and unadorned as its title.