Tigers Blood | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Waxahatchee |
Cover: | Waxahatchee - Tigers Blood.png |
Alt: | A photo of the artist stood next to a pole holding a sign out of view above her in a grassy field. |
Recorded: | 2022–2023 |
Studio: | Sonic Ranch, Texas |
Length: | 42:46 |
Label: | Anti- |
Producer: | Brad Cook |
Prev Title: | I Walked with You a Ways |
Prev Year: | 2022 |
Tigers Blood is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter Waxahatchee. It was released on March 22, 2024, through Anti-. It was preceded by the release of three singles, "Right Back to It", "Bored", and "365". The album received acclaim from critics, and garnered Waxahatchee a nomination for the Grammy Award for Best Americana Album, her first nomination at the awards. [1]
Following the release of Saint Cloud (2020), which posed "an obvious pivot" in sound to the singer, Crutchfield and her producer Brad Cook were unsure as to how to follow-up the record as due to a vast positive reception. The singer started writing material for the album during a "hot hand spell" while on tour towards the end of 2022.[2] The track "365" with prominent "pop sound, pop production" was created during early recording sessions at Sonic Ranch, Texas. Guitarist MJ Lenderman was later invited by the duo and would eventually be featured on all of the songs playing electric guitar. A harmonization with him on "Right Back to It" "was the big pivotal moment" for her and Cook that they wanted to capture on the whole album.[3] Other collaborators include Spencer Tweedy and Phil Cook.[4]
Crutchfield revealed that Tigers Blood came together "much more easily" in comparison to Saint Cloud as she felt at peace with herself. After an interview with the singer, Andy Cush of Pitchfork opined that Crutchfield has "gotten better" at songwriting even though the record has more in common with her earlier work. Tigers Blood features tales of "late-night fights with loved ones, friendships frayed beyond repair, and elegies for an idyllic past" that may have never existed.[3] Waxahatchee embarked a North America tour to promote the record from April to August 2024.[5]
The album announcement on January 9, 2024, also saw the release of the lead single "Right Back to It". With the track, Crutchfield expressed her desire to write love songs that are "gritty and unromantic" and to always find your way back "to a newness or an intimacy" with the same person.[6] The second single "Bored", released on February 13, is a "high-spirited" track with "country flair". Crutchfield wrote the song from an authentic but challenging place of anger.[7]
Tigers Blood spent five weeks atop the NACC chart, as well as time at number one on the NACC Non-comm chart and four weeks atop NACC Canadian.[8]
Editors at review aggregator AnyDecentMusic? scored this album an 8.5 out of 10, based on 21 critics' scores.
Reviewing the album for AllMusic, senior editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote, "There's something bracing about the warmth Crutchfield creates on Tigers Blood, particularly in how it emanates as much from the performances as it does the songs," and called it, "the rarest of things: an album that feels familiar upon its surface and idiosyncratic in its details."
Pitchfork awarded Tigers Blood a "Best New Album" designation, writing that Crutchfield's "dazzling, piercing songwriting is perfectly in tune with the band behind her."
For The Observer, writer and editor Damien Morris noted its "precision and broad relatability", with her vocals "poised and precise – her best yet, caressing flamboyantly poetic lyrics."
Writing for The Line of Best Fit, John Amen concluded, "While Saint Cloud arguably represents the apex of Crutchfield's hook-savviness, Tigers Blood features flawlessly sculpted melodies as well as vocals that are more notably complex and lyrics that more thoroughly plumb the human condition. With Tigers Blood, Crutchfield continues to perfect her songcraft and elevate the Americana genre – asserting a panoramic vision, radiating wisdom.[9]
Accolade | Rank | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Exclaim! | 50 Best Albums of 2024 | 3 | [10] | |
MOJO | 75 Best Albums of 2024 | 30 | [11] | |
Rough Trade UK | Albums of the Year 2024 | 25 | [12] | |
Uncut | 80 Best Albums of 2024 | 10 | [13] |
Musicians
Technical
Peak position | |
Australian Country Albums (ARIA)[14] | 14 |
---|---|
French Physical Albums (SNEP)[15] | 172 |
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[16] | 35 |
Swedish Physical Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[17] | 7 |