Faye Webster is most at home in her own head. Every song on her fifth album puzzles over the way her brain works, how it worries over certain details, how it fixates on certain unpleasant feelings, how it works so often against her. She remembers the smell of her old apartment on โeBay Purchase Historyโ, and she thinks sheโs figured out why sheโs so self-conscious on โWanna Quit All The Timeโ. She tries in vain to evict an ex from her brainpan on, well, pretty much every song. Thatโs not to say sheโs an introvert โ Webster is active in the Atlanta arts scene as a photographer and collaborator, and that album title suggests she does get out of the house occasionally โ but her songs are all set deep within her own mind. Her primary subject is the tangle of needs and desires, fears and doubts, epiphanies and delusions contained therein.
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These new songs are all invitations into that headspace, and to her credit Webster doesnโt tidy up for company. The mess is the whole point. Itโs a fascinating place to be, largely because she finds so much meaning in everyday observations and mundane ironies, in the small moments many other songwriters might overlook. On โWanna Quit All The Timeโ she admits that sheโs โoverthinking in my head againโ and that sheโs โgood at making shit negativeโ, but she ends the song with a stray observation: โRight now I hate the colour of my houseโ. What sounds like a punchline becomes a gut-punch as she realises how little control she has over any aspect of her life.
Webster refined this balance of humour and pathos on her earliest albums in parallel with an idiosyncratic blend of country and R&B, and both became distinguishing signatures on 2021โs I Know Iโm Funny Haha. That album enjoyed a long life thanks in some part to TikTok; Webster doesnโt even have an account, but that didnโt stop fans from soundtracking their own clips with snippets of her songs. Months of sold-out tours and a meteoric increase in streaming does take its toll on her psyche, however. โItโs the attention that freaks me out,โ she declares, as though she could give up parts, but not all, of the music-making enterprise. Webster sounds like someone who would be mapping her brain even without an audience.
After recording her previous albums in Atlanta and nearby Athens, Georgia, Webster and her trusted backing band decamped to Texas, namely to Sonic Ranch Studios, where Bon Iver and Fiona Apple, among others, have recently recorded. The change of scenery gave her a new perspective on the place she calls home, but it also allowed the band to cut loose a bit. Tightened by long months on the road, they respond sensitively to her vocals, especially on the opening track, โThinking About Youโ. At six-and-a-half minutes, itโs the longest song Webster has ever released, and most of it consists of her singing the title over and over again. Her voice remains steady with each repetition, allowing the musicians to elaborate on motifs and ideas: Matt Stoessel and Nick Rosen uncork increasingly jazzy riffs on guitar and piano, respectively, while drummer Charles Garner and bassist Bryan Howard test the elasticity of the songโs breezy groove.
These familiar elements coalesce into something new for Webster: more than country or soul, Underdressed At The Symphony recalls the plushness of โ70s pop and โ60s exotica, but without any nostalgia and therefore without any irony or distance. That allows โLifetimeโ (the albumโs aching heart) and โBut Not Kissโ (its most dramatic heartbreaker) to sound unself-consciously beautiful โ which is all the more surprising given that Webster admits to such extreme self-consciousness. By contrast, โMy Baby Loves Me Yeah!โ and โLego Ringโ (featuring a vestigial verse from Atlanta rapper Lil Yachty) ride simple yet effective grooves, as she yearns for something beyond what she has, even if itโs just a plastic toy.
On Underdressed At The Symphony, less is more. Less is everything. Restraint is crucial to these songs, not just in the bandโs careful arrangements but in the way Webster emphasises expressiveness over vocal power. She is, in addition, a minimalist songwriter who uses as few words as possible to conjure emotions too messy or too contradictory or simply too painful to state outright. โI want to sleep in your arms but not kiss,โ she confesses on โBut Not Kissโ, an unusually uncommitted breakup song about getting close to an ex but not too close. Or, conversely, about pulling yourself away in increments, as though a gradual separation might spare you the pain. Rarely does overthinking a problem sound so inviting or so productive.