The Beggar (album) explained

The Beggar
Type:studio
Artist:Swans
Cover:The Beggar (2023) cover.jpg
Border:yes
Caption:Digital artwork for the album; physical copies come with the heart on a plain brown background
Alt:A heart on a white background
Released:June 23, 2023
Recorded:May 2 – August 25, 2022
Studio:Candy Bomber (Berlin)
Genre:
Length:121:37 (CD version)
77:46 (vinyl version)
Language:English
Producer:Michael Gira
Prev Title:Is There Really a Mind?
Prev Year:2022

The Beggar is the sixteenth studio album by the American experimental rock band Swans. It was released by Mute and Young God Records on June 23, 2023. Written during the COVID-19 pandemic, it was recorded at Candy Bomber Studio in Berlin, Germany across 2022, with key collaborators of front man Michael Gira, as well as both past and present members of the band.[4] [5] The announcement of the album coincided with the release of its lead single, "Paradise Is Mine", as well as the announcement of a world tour. The Beggar was preceded and funded by the acoustic demo album Is There Really a Mind? (2022).

Background

Swans released their fifteenth studio album Leaving Meaning in 2019, which was a new direction for the band. Front man Michael Gira stated that, starting with Leaving Meaning, he "decided to make Swans a more open-ended venture, with musicians coming and going from project to project". After the album's release, Swans planned for a series of tours to support Leaving Meaning in 2019 and 2020, but the tours were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This prompted Gira to write songs for a new Swans album.[6] Gira needed funding for the then-upcoming sixteenth studio album from the band, which led to the release of the fundraiser demo album Is There Really a Mind?, which was released in February 2022. The demo album consisted of acoustic renditions of many of the album's then-unfinished tracks, primarily recorded by Gira alone at his home studio. Gira promised support for the fundraiser would "go a long way in ensuring a fully realized and well produced album".[7] The album was recorded and mixed at Candy Bomber Studio in Berlin, Germany.[8]

Composition

The Beggar has been classified as post-rock and drone.[9] [10] Tyler Golsen of Far Out described the album's tone as "dark, mysterious, and lingering" and mentioned "Gira's signature ominous bray frequently moans and gargles its way throughout the seemingly-endless songs". Compositions on The Beggar are constructed around heavy repetition, that unlike the sheer force of older Swans records, is described by Aural Aggravation Christopher Nosnibor as "woozy and nagging".[11]

Promotion and release

The Beggar was announced on March 22, 2023 and coincided with the release of the album's lead single, "Paradise Is Mine". That same day, they also announced a world tour with shows in North America as well as the United Kingdom.[12] [13] The band followed it with a second and final single, "Los Angeles: City of Death", on May 24, 2023, as well as announced new shows to their world tour.[14]

The Beggar was released on June 23, 2023, via Mute and Young God Records.[15] [16]

Critical reception

The Beggar received positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, it received an average score of 80, based on 10 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". The aggregator AnyDecentMusic? gave it a 7.5 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.[17]

Writing for Louder Than War, John Robb awarded the album five out of five stars, and praised the band for being "full of surprise and enigma", and believes "they paint pictures and atmospheres that other bands can only dream of". Reviewing the album for Beats Per Minute, John Wohlmacher applauded the album for "mark[ing] Gira’s most self-reflective lyricism" and feels the album contains "his most approachable and nuanced compositions". In a review for The Guardian, critic Dave Simpson wrote that the album's "prevailing atmosphere" is "one of unsettling, claustrophobic unease, as [Gira] contemplates life and mortality" and compared tracks "Los Angeles: City of Death", "Michael Is Done" and "Unforming" to the work of the Velvet Underground, Brian Eno and Spiritualized, respectively. Wyndham Wallace of Uncut declared the album is "definitely not for the fainthearted" in a positive review. For MusicOMH, David Murphy proposed the album has "two [flavors], gliding between sweet and sour, heavenly and harrowing, or […] paradise and parasite" and wrote that "whilst listening is intentionally oppressive, it’s like the insidious continual whisper of conscience rather than the brimstone sermon, and even when songs reach a clangorous attack they tend to build frog-boilingly slowly from hushed beginnings". The Arts Desks Guy Oddy stated that "there is plenty that is new and interesting on The Beggar" while also noting "at two hours' long, some may still find it a bit much to consume in one sitting" in an overall positive review.[18]

Other reviewers were less enthusiastic, yet still positive. Reviewing the album for AllMusic, Paul Simpson compared it to the band's previous release, stating that "for the most part, The Beggar builds on the sound of Leaving Meaning, though Gira is clearly interested in pushing the band into weirder territory again," and called it, "a riskier yet more successful effort that feels like a step in a more fulfilling direction." Paul Attard of Slant Magazine found The Beggar was stopped from "reaching true greatness" because of "how it stands in the shadow of Swans’s recent albums" and criticized the album's "grandiosity" for becoming "slightly predictable". The Skinny's Joe Creely called The Beggar "another solid entry into the Swans canon, if not one that suggests it will have the staying power of their classics", and complimented the album for "mark[ing] Swans as a group intent on developing long into their career" as well as recognizing "there’s no threat of them losing their intensity" in a lukewarm review. In a review for Far Out, Golsen criticized the album's "interminable song lengths" and "complete absence of accessible melodies" for not appealing to casual listeners, but simultaneously praised Gira for "forsaking compromise and only playing to the most dedicated of listeners".[19]

Year-end lists

PublicationListRank
Rough TradeTop 100 Albums of the Year 202342[20]
FoppBest Albums of 2023[21]

Track listing

Vinyl edition

Notes

Personnel

Credits adapted from The Beggar digital liner notes and press release.[22]

Swans

Other musicians

Additional personnel

Release history

Region! scope="col"
DateFormat(s)Label
VariousJune 23, 2023[23]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gorania . Jay H. . Reviews - The Beggar . . 28 February 2024.
  2. Web site: Swans – The Beggar. Christopher Nosnibor. May 22, 2023. Aural Aggravation. June 7, 2023.
  3. Web site: Daly . Andrew . Swans influenced everyone from Nirvana to Tool, but Michael Gira still doesn't see himself as a guitarist . . 28 February 2024.
  4. Web site: Means-Shannon . Hannah . June 14, 2023 . Swans’ Michael Gira Seeks Out Ghost Notes and Offers Supplication For ‘The Beggar’ (INTERVIEW) . February 15, 2024 . Glide Magazine.
  5. Web site: Fu . Eddie . 22 March 2023 . Swans Announce New Album The Beggar, 2023 Tour Dates . March 22, 2023 . Consequence.
  6. Web site: Taysom . Joe . 22 March 2023 . Swans Announce Details of New Album "The Beggar" . March 22, 2023 . Far Out.
  7. Web site: Kenneally . Cerys . Swans Launch Fundraiser for 2023 Album with Acoustic Versions of Songs . March 23, 2023 . The Line of Best Fit.
  8. Web site: Osman . Tom . Swans' Michael Gira on 'The Beggar' – New Noise Magazine . . 28 February 2024.
  9. Web site: Swans – The Beggar. Christopher Nosnibor. May 22, 2023. Aural Aggravation. June 7, 2023.
  10. Web site: Daly . Andrew . Swans influenced everyone from Nirvana to Tool, but Michael Gira still doesn't see himself as a guitarist . . 28 February 2024.
  11. Web site: Swans – The Beggar. Christopher Nosnibor. May 22, 2023. Aural Aggravation. June 7, 2023.
  12. Web site: Pappis . Konstantinos . 22 March 2023 . Swans Announce New Album 'The Beggar', Release New Song 'Paradise Is Mine' . March 22, 2023 . ourculture.
  13. Web site: H. . Rob . 22 March 2023 . Swans Announce New Album and Share Epic Lead Single "Paradise Is Mine" . March 22, 2023 . Beats Per Minute.
  14. Web site: Goel . Rishi . May 26, 2023 . News: SWANS adds tour dates, unveils new track . February 15, 2024 . New Noise Magazine.
  15. Web site: The Beggar (Pre-Order) . March 22, 2023 . Young God Records.
  16. Web site: Swans Announce 16th Studio Album . . 26 February 2024.
  17. Web site: The Beggar by Swans reviews . . 15 February 2024.
  18. Web site: Oddy . Guy . June 19, 2023 . Album: Swans – The Beggar review . February 15, 2024 . The Arts Desk.
  19. Web site: Golsen . Tyler . June 23, 2023 . Swans – ‘The Beggar’ album review: a dense and dissonant descent . February 15, 2024 . Far Out.
  20. Web site: Top 100 Albums of the Year 2023 . . 15 February 2024.
  21. Web site: Best Albums of 2023 . . 15 February 2024.
  22. Web site: The Beggar. . March 22, 2023.
  23. Web site: The Beggar . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20231005233134/https://swans.bandcamp.com/album/the-beggar . October 5, 2023 . February 26, 2023 . Bandcamp.