Tasha Balances Grieving Minimalism With the Grand and Dramatic Side of Beauty on All This and So Much More
The Chicago singer-songwriter’s new LP continues her multi-dimensionality with its seamless blend of R&B, folk, pop and jazz, each style shining on its own but expertly supporting the story of her Saturn return.

The planets have genuinely aligned for Tasha Viets-VanLear. The Chicago-based musician documents her Saturn return—the period when Saturn returns to the same position it was in the sky when you were born—on her new LP, All This and So Much More. The Saturn return is about shedding your old life and rediscovering who you are in a glorious rejuvenation cycle, and that shift into a new period was tectonic for Tasha, who lays waste to a previous life and sets the foundations for a new beginning. Since her 2021 album Tell Me What You Miss the Most, the singer-songwriter—who goes by the mononym of her first name—has had encounters with grief, endured a sudden breakup, traveled the world, appeared in a Tony-winning Broadway musical and even obtained a fresh hair color—a necessary change for when life flips on its head.
Having just ended her turn as a cast member in the stage adaptation of Sufjan Stevens’s album Illinois in August, the Chicagoan leaves behind Stevens’s vulnerability to explore her own throughout All This and So Much More. Though the resemblance to the coming-of-age musical is noticeable with her exploration of friendship, romance and loss, Tasha’s unique voice and inherently distinctive experiences amalgamate into an intimate journey with a new life. The rose-tinted, minimalistic Tell Me What You Miss The Most, with its flourishing garden of love and relationships, grows some thorns during this chapter, but the flowers are still as vibrant as ever. Tasha reflects life with realism while maintaining faith in the shadow of a bright future.
Like her former self, the beginning of All This and So Much More is stripped bare, focusing solely on Tasha’s trek through self-discovery in her late 20s. The quiet forces an attuned ear for her sorrows, idyllic musings and self-reflection as a subtle, chest-aching synth lures you into Tasha’s retelling of the last few years in “Pretend.” “What kind of person could I become,” she ponders as her “feelings [are] outgrowing this little life.” The spacious stillness warms up with the jangly acoustics of “The Beginning,” as she reframes life-changing events as opportunities for rebirth—inviting herself and us into the opening of a new adventure. “Let’s pretend this winter will be easy / We can listen to the same three songs on repeat / Sadness isn’t even very interesting / But I keep coming back to this old feeling,” she sings, romanticizing the uncertainty and uncomfortableness of this new dawn awaiting her.
In chasing the harmony of her planetary alignment, Tasha waltzes with airy melodies on “Be Better” and “Good Song,” turning up the volume ever so slightly and bringing a richness to the soundscape with the woodwind flourishes on the former and sci-fi synth stings on the latter. Forgoing the sparse arrangements of her previous record, Tasha opts for bigger sounds and bolder swings due in part to co-producer Gregory Uhlmann’s penchant for the grand and dramatic side of beauty.