
The song titles are a tip-off. With a Bon Iver album, they can be a difficult proposition. Ever since 2016’s 22, A Million, the tracklist for a Justin Vernon LP reads more like a menacing letter from a Zodiac-inspired serial killer than a rundown of songs. Random numbers and strange symbols are plentiful. Easily pronounceable words are not. But there is a method to the madness. When it’s a challenge to put a name to a song, that song becomes hard to pin down and decipher. Even when contained on a record by one of the biggest indie-rock stars of the last 20 years, the song remains elusive and enigmatic. And, by association, so does the artist.
But on SABLE, fABLE (the first Bon Iver album in six years, and the fifth overall), the song titles are shockingly comprehensible. Yes, there’s a song called “Speyside” — one of three tracks carried over from last year’s SABLE, EP — which is stylized in all caps with a space between each letter, a move designed to taunt typesetters everywhere while also possibly confusing Scotch liquor enthusiasts. And don’t overlook “There’s A Rhythmn,” with the intentional misspelling that may or may not reference the state of Minnesota, just because that seems like an extremely Bon Iver thing to do.
But what about one of the new album’s standouts, a duet with Danielle Haim called “I’ll Be There”? Vernon titling a song “I’ll Be There” is like Frank Zappa naming one of his sons John Frederick Zappa. It’s a weird act of uncharacteristic normalcy. And yet it suits the track, an art-rock love song with churchy chords and bedroom-sultry vocals that sounds like Luther Vandross as produced by Godley & Creme or Peter Gabriel after an intense six-month Sade phase. Vernon and Haim’s voices are distorted, but not as much as you might expect, and the disheveled rhythm track rubs up against the yacht-rock electric piano licks in a manner that’s warm and sensual rather than disorienting. It’s a vibe that evokes another relatively straitlaced song title from SABLE, fABLE: “Everything Is Peaceful Love.” Another high point of the LP, this song finds Vernon playing full-on with the sort of feel-good ’90s R&B he’s only hinted at on previous releases, and only via a mile-deep layer of effects, noises, and other assorted digitized alienation devices. This time, however, everything does instead seem peaceful love.