JAPANESE BREAKFAST
FOR MELANCHOLY BRUNETTES (& SAD WOMEN) TAPE
PREORDER out 3/21/2025

DEAD OCEANS

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*This is a pre-order. Items will ship on or around the release date of MARCH 21, 2025. For orders that have multiple items with pre-orders, all items will be held until every item from the order is available to ship. Please contact us with any questions.

UPC: 656605172521
Label: DEAD OCEANS
Format: TAPE
Release Date: MARCH 21, 2025

    After a decade making the most of improvised recording spaces
    set in warehouses, trailers and lofts, Japanese Breakfast’s fourth
    album, For Melancholy Brunettes (& sad women), marks the band’s
    first proper studio release. Produced by Grammy Award winner
    Blake Mills, the record sees front-woman and songwriter Michelle
    Zauner pull back from the bright extroversion that defined its
    predecessor Jubilee to examine the darker waves that roil within,
    the moody, fecund field of melancholy, long held to be the psychic
    state of poets on the verge of inspiration. The result is an artistic
    statement of purpose: a mature, intricate, contemplative work that
    conjures the romantic thrill of a gothic novel.

    For Melancholy Brunettes follows a transformative period in
    Zauner’s life during which her 2x GRAMMY nominated breakthrough
    album Jubilee and her bestselling memoir Crying In H Mart
    catapulted her into the cultural mainstream, delivering on her
    deepest artistic ambitions. Reflecting on that success, Zauner came
    to appreciate the irony of desire, which so often commingles bliss
    and doom. “I felt seduced by getting what I always wanted,” she
    says. “I was flying too close to the sun, and I realized if I kept
    going I was going to die.”

    The plight of Icarus and other such condemned ones lends For
    Melancholy Brunettes its most persistent theme, the perils of
    desire. Like light dispersed, its spectral parts take the album’s
    characters through cycles of temptation, transgression and
    retribution. On “Orlando in Love” — a riff on John Cheever’s riff on
    Orlando Innamorato, an unfinished epic made up of 68 ½ cantos by
    the Renaissance poet Matteo Maria Boiardo — the hero is a well
    meaning poet who parks his Winnebago by the sea and falls victim
    to a siren’s call, his 69th canto (even in the lofty realm of classical
    myth Zauner has a soft spot for innuendo). “Honey Water” plumbs
    the quiet rage of a woman married to an unfaithful man, watching
    him cede again and again to lust like a base insect perpetuating its
    own demise.

    Sadness is indeed the dominant emotional key of this record, but it
    is sadness of a rarified form: the pensive, prescient sadness of
    melancholy, in which the recognition of life’s essentially tragic
    character occurs with sensitivity to its fleeting beauty. Zauner finds
    space enough inside it for glimmers of hope. They are the
    consolations of mortals that poets before her have called out to
    and that poets after will continue to rediscover: love and labor, and
    though they run like tonic resolutions through the record’s many
    episodes, they sound most saliently on its final song, “Magic
    Mountain,” an engagement with Thomas Mann’s famous novel of
    the same name. For her, making any work feels like scaling a
    mountain, but from the perch of For Melancholy Brunettes, she
    surveys the future.

    TRACK LIST:

    1. Here is Someone
    2. Orlando in Love
    3. Honey Water
    4. Mega Circuit
    5. Little Girl
    6. Leda
    7. Picture Window
    8. Men in Bars
    9. Winter in LA
    10. Magic Mountain



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