Mipso: Mipso

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… [Rounder Records; Oct. 16]

Mipsoโ€™s 2018 LP, the expansive Edges Run, found the North Carolina quartet broadening its sonic palette. In interviews, the band members have talked about how the recording sessions almost broke them up. Thankfully, Mipso soldiered on, staking out a captivating new identity on its latest album with material that both charms and challenges.ย 

Mipso retains the lush instrumentation of its predecessorโ€”assisted by longtime touring drummer Yan Westerlund and a handful of guestsโ€”while injecting some playfulness back into the proceedings. The woozy track โ€œLet a Little Light Inโ€ embraces instrumental quirkiness by including a toy piano, pulling back a curtain of melancholy and nostalgia to take a clear look at childhood memories.ย 

This is a common thread throughout the album as the bandโ€™s four singers and songwritersโ€”guitarist Joseph Terrell, fiddler Libby Rodenbough, mandolinist Jacob Sharp, and bassist Wood Robinsonโ€”struggle with existential questions through a lens that keeps them from becoming too heavy. Banjo-accented grooves back explorations of body image (โ€œYour Bodyโ€) and mental health (โ€œHelpโ€), while โ€œHey, Coyoteโ€ and โ€œJust Want to Be Lovedโ€ examine the security found in a home and a romantic relationship, respectively.

Taken together, Mipsoโ€™s final two tracks demonstrate the bandโ€™s versatility while also speaking to environmental concerns. โ€œShelterโ€ finds each member taking a vocal turn for a verse, revealing four vastly different characters that each need physical or metaphorical shelter. Terrellโ€™s foam-dampened acoustic guitar mimics the warmth of a plucked mbira over simple hand percussion, while Rodenboughโ€™s ethereal fiddle flourishes.

Meanwhile, though heโ€™s relocated to Utah, Robinson connects to his home state by voicing the economic and natural-disaster devastation faced by his Robeson County relatives.ย 

A jaunty waltz highlighted by the bandโ€™s trademark harmonies, โ€œWallpaper Babyโ€ sounds like classic Mipso, though it belies more-serious subject matter: Rodenbough builds the refrain around the metaphor of a house collapsingโ€”โ€œGet over the wallpaper, baby/This house is coming downโ€โ€”as a reminder of looming catastrophic climate change.

Since its formation, the members of Mipso have made their own forays: Robinson released a solo project, Wood Robinsonโ€™s New Formal, in 2016; Rodenbough released her terrific solo project earlier this year;ย and Terrell recently recorded a new project with his brother. But itโ€™s clear on Mipso that these efforts havenโ€™t come at the expense of the group. Indeed, this new album finds the quartet refining one anotherโ€™s contributions, making it Mipsoโ€™s richest album yet.


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Bio: Spencer Griffith lives in Raleigh, where he teaches school and writes about bands.