When Cassandra Jenkins released her second album, 2021โ€™s 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 Palehoundโ€™s Ed Kempner, and take a second shot at the new songs. This time, something bloomed.

The result is a record that confirms โ€ฆPhenomenal 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.

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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 โ€ฆPhenomenal 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, โ€œHayleyโ€).

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 Lightโ€ฆโ€™s field recordings, sonic turns and the subtle unfolding of these tracks. From the first lines of opener โ€œDevotionโ€, Jenkinsโ€™ voice is a cool balm: โ€œI think youโ€™ve mistaken my desperation for devotion,โ€ she sings, low and soft. Itโ€™s an arresting start: intriguing and elliptical and hopeful, in much the same way that โ€ฆPhenomenal Nature began: โ€œIโ€™m 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 โ€œDelphinium Blueโ€ and โ€œAttente Telephoniqueโ€, and the sensuous yearning of โ€œOmakaseโ€ ยญโ€“ a song named for an expensive lab-grown strawberry, and from which the album takes its title: โ€œMy lover/My light/My destroyer/My meteorite.โ€

At this proximity itโ€™s easy, too, to revel in Jenkinsโ€™ observational humour โ€“ there in the casting of Sisyphus in โ€œOnly Oneโ€โ€™s sorry tale of heartbreak, with its repeated, rolling refrain, โ€œYouโ€™re the only one Iโ€™ve 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 โ€œPetCoโ€, 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, sheโ€™s 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 albumโ€™s heart lies โ€œBetelgeuseโ€, 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. โ€œItโ€™s fun to look at the moon through binoculars,โ€ her mother says, unwittingly drawing together some of the recordโ€™s themes.

Over and again, one feels Jenkins breaking through the glass to touch the beauty of what lies beyond. โ€œDonโ€™t mistake my breaking open/For broken,โ€ she sings on โ€œDevotionโ€. Itโ€™s a thought that governs the record: this is the sound of an artist quietly, rapturously coming to life.

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