A Pillar of Salt explained

A Pillar of Salt
Type:studio
Artist:Noah Gundersen
Cover:File:A Pillar of Salt by Noah Gundersen.jpg
Label:Cooking Vinyl America
Producer:Andy Park
Prev Title:Lover
Prev Year:2019
Next Title:If This Is The End
Next Year:2023

A Pillar of Salt is the sixth studio album by American folk music artist Noah Gundersen. It was released by Cooking Vinyl America on October 8, 2021.

Background

A Pillar of Salt was written over a period starting in March 2020 and continuing well into 2021. On September 13, Gundersen announced that the full album would be released on October 8, and provided links to pre-order vinyl LP or CD copies. The following day he announced the album would be performed live in its entirety at St. Marks Cathedral in Seattle on December 4.

On September 29, Gundersen outlined an upcoming 2022 Europe/UK Tour in support of A Pillar of Salt. Beginning in March 2022, Gundersen toured for two and a half weeks across Europe, starting in Stockholm and finishing in Dublin.[1]

Release

Physical release

The long single for the album, "Sleepless in Seattle", premiered on streaming services on September 10, 2021. The album released in its entirety on October 8. Physical copies were made available for purchase on Gundersen's online store, and the album is on all major streaming services.

Reception

A Pillar of Salt received widespread critical acclaim. Sputnik Music said that the album "takes ageless topics such as identity, vices, and faith and makes them both deeply personal and widely universal" in its 4.5/5 star review.[2] Gundersen's lyricism was a common theme across positive reviews. In its 8.0/10 review of the album, The Line of Best Fit remarked: "It's a scrapbook of life and its lessons, considered in retrospect by a veteran writer and musician."[3]

Additionally, upon the release of the album Gundersen was featured on Spotify's Grade A playlist as the cover artist. The playlist, which curates what it describes as 'a quality alternative blend', featured "Atlantis" in its October 8 edition.

Despite not being released as a promotional single, "Atlantis" was a major source of media attention for A Pillar of Salt, largely due to the fame of guest vocalist Phoebe Bridgers. British music outlet NME described the track as "somber" and noted the music video, which was shot entirely on an iPhone.[4] KEXP, one of Seattle's largest public radio stations, called the album "a well-crafted set of brooding folk-pop with an atmospheric sound featuring acoustic and electric guitars, piano, haunting melodies and introspective lyrics."[5]

Craig Manning of Chorus.fm called the album "a goddamn masterpiece". He observed in his review that the album served as an amalgamation of qualities from Gundersen's previous discography: "Everything he did well on each of his previous albums is here somewhere, and it all meshes together into a perfect tapestry. The throwback troubadour of Ledges; the thoughtful intellectual of Carry the Ghost; the architect of all those big, bruising crescendos that drove White Noise; the pop polyglot of Lover."[6]

Themes

Like much of his music, A Pillar of Salt depicts Gundersen's earnest ambivalence concerning spiritual issues, in spite of the aching consequences and worry this causes himself and his loved ones. "He is unafraid of irreverently subverting biblical wisdom" in order to ask the question, "What will win in the end: the will of a man... or the unseen powers of providential fate?"[7]

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Noah Gundersen . 2021-10-18 . Noah Gundersen . en.
  2. Web site: Noah Gundersen - A Pillar of Salt (album review) . 2021-10-18 . Sputnikmusic.
  3. Web site: Noah Gundersen centres brooding nostalgia on A Pillar Of Salt . 2021-10-18 . The Line of Best Fit . en.
  4. Web site: Phoebe Bridgers guests on Noah Gundersen track 'Atlantis' . 2021-10-11 . NME . en-GB . 2021-10-19.
  5. Web site: New Music Reviews (10/11) . KEXP.org . 2021-10-19.
  6. Web site: Noah Gundersen – A Pillar of Salt . Chorus.fm . October 8, 2021 . en-US . 2021-10-19.
  7. Web site: Love in A Pillar of Salt . 2022-03-02 . Mere Orthodoxy: Christianity, Politics, and Culture . 2022-07-19 . en-US.