Hole in My Head | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Laura Jane Grace |
Cover: | Laura Jane Grace - Hole in My Head.png |
Alt: | A black-and-white photograph of Laura standing in the middle of a paved brick road with her head down and a colorful mix of elements coming out of the top of it |
Recorded: | February 2023 |
Studio: | Native Sound (St. Louis, Missouri, US) |
Genre: | |
Length: | 25:28 |
Label: | Polyvinyl |
Producer: | Laura Jane Grace |
Prev Title: | At War with the Silverfish |
Prev Year: | 2021 |
Hole in My Head is the second solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Laura Jane Grace, released on February 16, 2024, through Polyvinyl Record Co. It received acclaim from critics.
The album was written by Grace as she was touring the world. Along with playing the guitar, Grace also played the drums, accompanied by Drive-By Truckers bassist Matt Patton.
Hole in My Head received a score of 80 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on six critics' reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reception. Glide Magazines John Moore called it "a brilliant mix of humor, spite and self-preservation" as well as "a stylistically elastic record that covers folk, pop and rock all filtered through the experiences of a lifelong punk rocker".[1] AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine found that it "isn't quite so urgent" as Stay Alive (2020) "yet it feels of a piece with its predecessor, coming from a similar place of confusion", calling it "a lean, nervy rock album that uses its mess and its contradictions to its own advantage".
DIYs Ben Tipple stated that there is "something inherently welcoming in the short, sharp, and lyrically open songs" as "each track unfolds with an ease only reserved for somebody with so much skin in the game". Reviewing the album for Exclaim!, Anthony Boire called it "an open invitation to a wild romp through Grace's psyche" on which "Grace is still giving it her all". James Hickie of Kerrang! found Hole in My Head to be "evocative stuff" as well as "a characteristically brisk affair, with its 11 tracks clocking in at just 25 minutes, but overflowing with ideas, insights and the odd barb". Annie Howard of Pitchfork characterized the album as "playfully retro punk songs" on which Grace "weaves through the stripped-down style [she] explored on 2020's Stay Alive and louder songs more akin to her work with Against Me!".