8/10
On 'For Melancholy Brunettes (& sad women)', Michelle Zauner—better known as Japanese Breakfast—trades the shimmering optimism of 'Jubilee' for something richer, murkier, and exquisitely restrained. The new album is less a sequel and more a mirror turned inward: reflecting long silences, unspoken longings, and the emotional weight of time passing.
In place of 'Jubilee'’s wide-eyed effervescence, 'For Melancholy Brunettes...' presents a slow-burning exploration of vulnerability and poetic unrest. Where her previous work sparkled with kinetic joy, here Zauner embraces shadowy hues like oil on water, glistening and murky all at once. Produced by the ever-subtle Blake Mills, known for his precise touch and atmospheric dexterity, the record feels both lived-in and elusive, an elegant unraveling.
The record draws breath in the spaces between guitar strings and layered keys, allowing Zauner’s gentle yet piercing voice to guide us through meditations on desire, consequence, and the fragile line separating hope from hurt. Mills’ production never intrudes; instead, it drapes the songs in subtle textures, shaping a terrain that’s at once intimate and grand.
With her most reflective album to date, Japanese Breakfast carves out a space for nuance in a world that too often demands resolution. 'For Melancholy Brunettes (& sad women)' doesn’t seek to fix or uplift—it simply sits beside you in the dark, whispering that you are not alone.