When Cassandra Jenkins released her second album, 2021โs An Overview On Phenomenal Nature, it was in the spirit of a last hurrah. A little lost, a little disheartened, its collection of songs spoke to the dislocation of that particular time in Jenkinsโ life when, following the death of David Berman, there came keen grief, a cancelled tour with Purple Mountains, a questioning of whether music was really the career for her.
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She half-sang, half spoke, her voice slow and dusky and beguiling, and wound her storytelling with richly drawn characters and field recordings: birdsong, a guided meditation, a security guard discussing a Mrinalini Mukherjee exhibit at The Met Breuer. The effect was beautiful, intimate, inquisitive, wise; a record that felt so complete, one wondered how she might ever devise a follow-up.
Jenkins wondered the same thing. My Light, My Destroyer was not an easy album to make. The success of its predecessor had led to a gruelling tour schedule and a surge of media attention, all of which left the songwriter physically and emotionally drained. Still, there came a first attempt in the studio, an effort to recreate the magic of the previous recording. And then disappointment, and a rethink. A few months later, somewhat replenished, Jenkins opted to reassemble her collaborators, among them producer, engineer and mixer Andrew Lappin, Josh Kaufman and Palehoundโs Ed Kempner, and take a second shot at the new songs. This time, something bloomed.
The result is a record that confirms โฆPhenomenal Nature was no fluke. This is the sound of Jenkins hitting her stride โ less disembodied than its predecessor, more grounded, its tone ranging from the easy warmth of Tom Petty to the steady discernment of Aimee Mann, via a little Laurie Anderson.

Jenkins draws, too, on the influence of prose writers such as Rebecca Solnit and Maggie Nelson, whose work gathers together disparate threads โ the personal, the political, the observational, to create something profoundly illuminating. On โฆPhenomenal Nature, and perhaps even more on My Light, My Destroyer, Jenkins gives us a musical version of this essayistic approach: insights reached through studied songwriting, snippets of conversation, bursts of instrumentals (most notably the exquisite album closer, โHayleyโ).
While comparisons to others are helpful, in reality Jenkins is quite distinctly her own thing, and the only true resemblance is to her previous record โ there in My Lightโฆโs field recordings, sonic turns and the subtle unfolding of these tracks. From the first lines of opener โDevotionโ, Jenkinsโ voice is a cool balm: โI think youโve mistaken my desperation for devotion,โ she sings, low and soft. Itโs an arresting start: intriguing and elliptical and hopeful, in much the same way that โฆPhenomenal Nature began: โIโm a three-legged dog, working with what I got.โ
As with last time, the listener instinctively leans in closer. Close enough to catch the spoken word of โDelphinium Blueโ and โAttente Telephoniqueโ, and the sensuous yearning of โOmakaseโ ยญโ a song named for an expensive lab-grown strawberry, and from which the album takes its title: โMy lover/My light/My destroyer/My meteorite.โ
At this proximity itโs easy, too, to revel in Jenkinsโ observational humour โ there in the casting of Sisyphus in โOnly Oneโโs sorry tale of heartbreak, with its repeated, rolling refrain, โYouโre the only one Iโve ever loved/The only one I know how to loveโ, in the unexpected appearances of William Shatner, and perhaps most of all in the curious details of โPetCoโ, in which Jenkins wanders through a pet shop, trying to be less alone.
Most of all what infuses My Light, My Destroyer is a sense of cosmic awe. The record begins and ends at break of dawn, and at various points Jenkins looks up towards the heavens โ to the ceiling, to the aeroplanes and the rocket ships and the meteorites. At others, sheโs contemplating nature through glass โ delphiniums and narcissus in the flower shop, the blue of earth viewed from space, the sky from a tour bus window, those laboratory strawberries and pet shop lizards.
At the albumโs heart lies โBetelgeuseโ, a song of lugubrious brass and rippled piano, in which a stargazing Jenkins is joined by her own mother, a science teacher, as they admire the brightness of Mars, Venus, Betelgeuse. โItโs fun to look at the moon through binoculars,โ her mother says, unwittingly drawing together some of the recordโs themes.
Over and again, one feels Jenkins breaking through the glass to touch the beauty of what lies beyond. โDonโt mistake my breaking open/For broken,โ she sings on โDevotionโ. Itโs a thought that governs the record: this is the sound of an artist quietly, rapturously coming to life.
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