
MJ Lenderman - Boat Songs (2025 ReIssue)
Album of The week â Staff Review
This week sees the reissue of Boat Songs, MJ Lendermanâs third studio album, originally released in 2022. Its reissue arrives on the back of Lendermanâs speedy ascent as one of indie-rockâs most celebrated and talked-about songwriters. Though Boat Songs earned widespread critical acclaim on release, its home on the small Dear Life Records meant that finding a physical copy the first time around proved fairly difficult. Thankfully, this fantastic album, which is superior, to my ears, even to the excellent Manning Fireworks (2024), is finally back on vinyl and CD with much wider distribution.
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While his self-titled debut and Ghost of Your Guitar Solo, both also reissued this week, laid the groundwork for his indie-rock spin on country and folk, Boat Songs is where the Asheville, North Carolina musician truly perfects his craft. As weâve come to expect from Lenderman, the record is full to the brim with pathos, melancholy, wit, and just the right amount of slacker charm in both production and performance. Thereâs an effortlessness to his writing that makes it so fresh and fluid, and ensures Boat Songs is such a joy to listen to, and frequently a genuine rush.
Many of these tracks have become live staples over the last three years, as captured on his superb Live & Loose! album from earlier this year. And they still hit just as hard on re-listens here. Opener Hangover Game finds Lenderman giving his own version of Michael Jordanâs infamous 1997 âFlu Game,â insisting, with a knowing smile, that Jordan, despite scoring 38 points, was simply hungover like any regular person, and the official excuses werenât fooling anyone. Another American sports icon, Dan Marino, takes centre stage on the lo-fi, fuzzed-out, country-rocking Dan Marino, a wry, yet touching lament about seeing his image on a cereal-box replaced by successor Tom Brady.
But Boat Songs isnât just jokes and smart observations. TLC Cage Match ponders the very real toll of professional wrestling, how scripted outcomes do nothing to soften the damage done to bodies for the sake of entertainment. Elsewhere, the failures and false promises of the American dream haunt another stand-out track, the cathartic Toontown.Â
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Further release comes in the fantastic Neil Young & Crazy Horse-like crunch of You Are Every Girl to Me, and the superb penultimate track Tastes Just Like It Costs, which further presents Lendermanâs ongoing preoccupations with everyday consumerism and things never quite living up to expectations, bleeding briefly into the political with the sharp couplet: âwhat did I tell you / about wearing that dumb hat / you know the one Iâm talkinâ about.â I think we all know which hat.
Across Boat Songs, Lenderman carves out his own corner within the vast landscape of American music, wading into the ditch with the distorted glory of Neil Young, basking in the glory of â90s American alt-rock, and orbiting traces of Jason Molina, Mark Linkous (Sparklehorse), and David Berman (Silver Jews).
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Boat Songs is the followup to Lendermanâs 2021 label debut, Ghost of Your Guitar Solo, and subsequent release, Knockinâ, with Dear Life Records, both of which were critically acclaimed for their off-the-cuff alternative country sound. But with Boat Songs, Lenderman emerges confident as ever, an innovative yet unassuming artist, straightforward and true.
Recorded at Ashevilleâs Drop of Sun with Alex Farrar and Colin Miller, Boat Songs is the first album Lenderman made in a professional studio. WWE matches and basketball games were silently projected on the studio walls during recording sessions. And you can hear their power in these ten unapologetically lo-fi tracks, each brimming with pent-up energy and the element of surprise.
A clavichord honks throughout âYou Have Bought Yourself A Boatâ with the playfulness of a live Dylan/Band set. âSUVâ screams with My Bloody Valentine distortion. When Xandy Chelmis beautifully bends his steel guitar on âTLC Cage Matchâ you can't help but think of Gram Parsons. And âTastes Just Like It Costsâ howls with the intensity of Crazy Horse era Neil Young. Boat Songs is fearless and itâs exciting. It challenges the perception of what modern day country music is supposed to be and where it can go.
But no matter where Boat Songs goes sonically, the album is deeply rooted in Lendermanâs natural gifts as a storyteller. Someone once asked Hank Williams what made country music successful and he said, âOne word: sincerity.â Filled with everyday observations ripped straight from his journal, Lendermanâs lyrics are sincere in their absurdities, with the vulnerability and honesty of Jason Molina and Daniel Johnston. There are moments of humor (âJackass is funny like the Earth is roundâ), admission (âI know why we get so fucked upâ), and recognition of beauty others might not stop to see (âYour laundry looks so pretty...relaxing in the windâ). Read alone on the page, âHangover Game,â âYou Have Bought Yourself A Boat,â and âDan Marino,â stand out as perfect little poems, unpretentious and real. Simply said, these songs are unforgettable.
Or you could also say it like this: listening to Boat Songs by MJ Lenderman is like joining your best friends out on the porch. The neighbors might be yelling and the bugs might be biting. But yâall are shooting the shit and letting loose, telling the same old stories again and again. But it donât matter how many times youâve heard them, because they're from the heartâand in the end they always make you feel alive again.
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Description
Album of The week â Staff Review
This week sees the reissue of Boat Songs, MJ Lendermanâs third studio album, originally released in 2022. Its reissue arrives on the back of Lendermanâs speedy ascent as one of indie-rockâs most celebrated and talked-about songwriters. Though Boat Songs earned widespread critical acclaim on release, its home on the small Dear Life Records meant that finding a physical copy the first time around proved fairly difficult. Thankfully, this fantastic album, which is superior, to my ears, even to the excellent Manning Fireworks (2024), is finally back on vinyl and CD with much wider distribution.
Â
While his self-titled debut and Ghost of Your Guitar Solo, both also reissued this week, laid the groundwork for his indie-rock spin on country and folk, Boat Songs is where the Asheville, North Carolina musician truly perfects his craft. As weâve come to expect from Lenderman, the record is full to the brim with pathos, melancholy, wit, and just the right amount of slacker charm in both production and performance. Thereâs an effortlessness to his writing that makes it so fresh and fluid, and ensures Boat Songs is such a joy to listen to, and frequently a genuine rush.
Many of these tracks have become live staples over the last three years, as captured on his superb Live & Loose! album from earlier this year. And they still hit just as hard on re-listens here. Opener Hangover Game finds Lenderman giving his own version of Michael Jordanâs infamous 1997 âFlu Game,â insisting, with a knowing smile, that Jordan, despite scoring 38 points, was simply hungover like any regular person, and the official excuses werenât fooling anyone. Another American sports icon, Dan Marino, takes centre stage on the lo-fi, fuzzed-out, country-rocking Dan Marino, a wry, yet touching lament about seeing his image on a cereal-box replaced by successor Tom Brady.
But Boat Songs isnât just jokes and smart observations. TLC Cage Match ponders the very real toll of professional wrestling, how scripted outcomes do nothing to soften the damage done to bodies for the sake of entertainment. Elsewhere, the failures and false promises of the American dream haunt another stand-out track, the cathartic Toontown.Â
Â
Further release comes in the fantastic Neil Young & Crazy Horse-like crunch of You Are Every Girl to Me, and the superb penultimate track Tastes Just Like It Costs, which further presents Lendermanâs ongoing preoccupations with everyday consumerism and things never quite living up to expectations, bleeding briefly into the political with the sharp couplet: âwhat did I tell you / about wearing that dumb hat / you know the one Iâm talkinâ about.â I think we all know which hat.
Across Boat Songs, Lenderman carves out his own corner within the vast landscape of American music, wading into the ditch with the distorted glory of Neil Young, basking in the glory of â90s American alt-rock, and orbiting traces of Jason Molina, Mark Linkous (Sparklehorse), and David Berman (Silver Jews).
Â
Boat Songs is the followup to Lendermanâs 2021 label debut, Ghost of Your Guitar Solo, and subsequent release, Knockinâ, with Dear Life Records, both of which were critically acclaimed for their off-the-cuff alternative country sound. But with Boat Songs, Lenderman emerges confident as ever, an innovative yet unassuming artist, straightforward and true.
Recorded at Ashevilleâs Drop of Sun with Alex Farrar and Colin Miller, Boat Songs is the first album Lenderman made in a professional studio. WWE matches and basketball games were silently projected on the studio walls during recording sessions. And you can hear their power in these ten unapologetically lo-fi tracks, each brimming with pent-up energy and the element of surprise.
A clavichord honks throughout âYou Have Bought Yourself A Boatâ with the playfulness of a live Dylan/Band set. âSUVâ screams with My Bloody Valentine distortion. When Xandy Chelmis beautifully bends his steel guitar on âTLC Cage Matchâ you can't help but think of Gram Parsons. And âTastes Just Like It Costsâ howls with the intensity of Crazy Horse era Neil Young. Boat Songs is fearless and itâs exciting. It challenges the perception of what modern day country music is supposed to be and where it can go.
But no matter where Boat Songs goes sonically, the album is deeply rooted in Lendermanâs natural gifts as a storyteller. Someone once asked Hank Williams what made country music successful and he said, âOne word: sincerity.â Filled with everyday observations ripped straight from his journal, Lendermanâs lyrics are sincere in their absurdities, with the vulnerability and honesty of Jason Molina and Daniel Johnston. There are moments of humor (âJackass is funny like the Earth is roundâ), admission (âI know why we get so fucked upâ), and recognition of beauty others might not stop to see (âYour laundry looks so pretty...relaxing in the windâ). Read alone on the page, âHangover Game,â âYou Have Bought Yourself A Boat,â and âDan Marino,â stand out as perfect little poems, unpretentious and real. Simply said, these songs are unforgettable.
Or you could also say it like this: listening to Boat Songs by MJ Lenderman is like joining your best friends out on the porch. The neighbors might be yelling and the bugs might be biting. But yâall are shooting the shit and letting loose, telling the same old stories again and again. But it donât matter how many times youâve heard them, because they're from the heartâand in the end they always make you feel alive again.














