SABLE,

by 
EPOct 18 / 20244 songs, 12m 19s98%
Indie Folk Singer-Songwriter
Popular Highly Rated

Justin Vernon was just a few years removed from self-releasing his now legendary debut—2007’s *For Emma, Forever Ago*, recorded in wintry solitude—when he won an actual Grammy Award for its more polished follow-up in 2012. He’d become famous enough to watch his backstory become a punchline and his likeness parodied by Justin Timberlake on *Saturday Night Live*. (Timberlake would attempt to borrow the same mystique for his 2018 album, *Man of the Woods*.) You can understand why Vernon would want to change the subject for a time. For nearly a decade, he’s obscured some part of himself, hidden behind symbols and numbers, bandannas and bandmates, vocoders and vast collages of bleep and bloop—not to mention a still astonishing list of celebrity collaborators to whom he’s been more than happy to cede the limelight, Taylor Swift chief among them. The three-song *SABLE,* EP is immediately notable because it finds Vernon running it back, returning to the sound and feel that launched his career, singing in the first person. It’s a deliberate move away from the maximalist collage of 2019’s *i, i*. “When I made this song, I was feeling a lot of guilt,” he told an Eras Tour audience of 90,000 at Wembley Stadium in 2022, before playing “S P E Y S I D E,” a song that sounds here as though it could have been lifted from the *For Emma* sessions—just him and his guitar and his hurt, his falsetto slicing through a layer of strings. “I know that I can’t make good,” he sings. “How I wish I could.” On “AWARDS SEASON,” all you hear for its first and final minutes is Vernon’s voice amid a mist of ambient synth. There is nowhere to hide. “What was pain now’s gained,” he sings. “You know what is great? Nothing stays the same.”

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7.8 / 10

In a moving suite of songs about loneliness and disappointment, Justin Vernon distills the familiar pleasures of his extraordinary oeuvre with clarity and confidence.

A-

Vernon faces the changing of his own season on Bon Iver's first release in five years

Justin Vernon’s first project in five years marks a return to Bon Iver’s fragile folk roots in three sparse soul-baring tracks.

9.5 / 10

SABLE, by Bon Iver album review by David Saxum for Northern Transmissions. The project of Justin Vernon's EP drops on 10/18 via Jagjaguwar

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