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Following the quietly intricate
Wildly Idle (Humble Before the Void)
by two years,
Placeholder
sees
Hand Habits
grow from the solo project of session and touring guitarist
Meg Duffy
to an official band, if one with rotating members. Also unlike the home-recorded debut, the follow-up was tracked at
Justin Vernon
's April Base studio in Wisconsin, and
Duffy
's collaborators here include co-producer
Brad Cook
(
William Tyler
,
Big Red Machine
). The resulting album has a fuller sound, though it's still distinctly intimate. Lyrically,
explores various relationships -- good and bad -- which is reflected in a musical demeanor that's both melancholy and sweet. The album opens with a title track that includes several contexts for the word, including "Oh I was just a placeholder/Exchange for what you had." Its varied guitar textures, sauntering rhythm section including rhythm piano, and multi-tracked vocals provide what edges toward backing accompaniment compared to the musical counterpoint of some of the debut, though a dreamy, guitar-based atmosphere remains. The sweeter, affectionate-sounding "Are You Serious?" has sparkling synth tones and Omnichord woven into its palette alongside slide and rhythm guitar. Impressionistic lyrics remember someone from the past until "It all fades away/In the bathtub with clay on my face." Elsewhere, the wistful "Wildfire" is a drum-less track that relies on acoustic guitar, euphonium, and piano for its core. With the exception of the one-minute "Heat" -- which, reminiscent of the three "scenes" on the project's debut, offers an experimental, sample-based entry midway through -- the songs remain reflective and understated throughout these subtle variances. The album ends fittingly with "The Book on How to Change, Pt. 2," whose lyrics include lines like "I thought I heard your voice/It was just the TV screen" and the repeated "I don't have that memory." ~ Marcy Donelson
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