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Mitski

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American singer-songwriter (born 1990)

Mitski
Mitksi smiling while holding a microphone.
Mitski performing in 2023
Background information
Birth nameMitsuki Laycock
Also known asMitski Miyawaki
Born (1990-09-27)September 27, 1990 (age 34)
Mie Prefecture, Japan
OriginNew York City, U.S.
Genres
Occupations
  • Singer-songwriter
  • musician
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • guitar
  • bass
  • piano
Years active2012–present
Labels
Websitemitski.com
Musical artist

Mitski Miyawaki (bornMitsuki Laycock; September 27, 1990), known professionally asMitski, is an Americansinger-songwriter. Sheself-released her first two albums,Lush (2012), andRetired from Sad, New Career in Business (2013), while studying studio composition atPurchase College's Conservatory of Music.[3] The albums were originally made as her senior project. Her third studio album,Bury Me at Makeout Creek, was released in 2014 on the labelDouble Double Whammy.

Mitski signed withDead Oceans in 2015 and releasedPuberty 2 (2016),Be the Cowboy (2018), andLaurel Hell (2022), the last of which made the top ten in several countries. In 2022,The Guardian dubbed her the "best young songwriter" in the United States.[4] That same year, she co-composed "This Is a Life" withSon Lux for the filmEverything Everywhere All at Once, which earned her anAcademy Award nomination forBest Original Song. Her seventh studio album,The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We, was released in 2023. The album's third single, "My Love Mine All Mine", became Mitski's first song to chart on theBillboard Hot 100.[5][6]

Early life

[edit]

Mitski was born Mitsuki Laycock[7] on September 27, 1990, inMie Prefecture, Japan, to an American father and a Japanese mother;[8][9] she now uses her mother's surname, going by Mitski Miyawaki.[10][11] Her first language was Japanese.[12] She moved frequently while growing up due to her father's job at theUnited States Department of State, living inTurkey,China,Malaysia, theCzech Republic, and theDemocratic Republic of the Congo before settling in the United States.[13][14][15] She sang in a choir in high school and was 18 when she wrote her first song on the piano while living inAnkara, Turkey.[10]

Career

[edit]

2012–2017: Student albums,Bury Me at Makeout Creek andPuberty 2

[edit]

After enrolling atHunter College to study film, Mitski decided to pursue music instead and transferred toSUNY Purchase College's Conservatory of Music, where she studied studio composition. During her time at Purchase, she recorded andself-released her piano-based first and second albums,Lush (2012) andRetired from Sad, New Career in Business (2013), as student projects.[16][17] While there, Mitski met Patrick Hyland, who has produced her albums afterLush. In 2013, she collaborated with indie-rock artists Mike Rasimas and Mutsawashe Mangwendeza, providing vocals for the original song Ego and a cover of "Nightcall" byKavinsky.[18]

After graduating, she served as the vocalist for the short-livedprog-metal band Voice Coils[19] and began work on her third studio album,Bury Me at Makeout Creek, which was released on November 11, 2014, throughDouble Double Whammy. The album was reissued with four bonus tracks on April 7, 2015, throughDon Giovanni Records. The album's raw, impulsive guitar represented a sonic departure from the orchestral and classical piano sounds of her first two albums.[11] It garnered acclaim from numerous publications.[20][21][22][23] However, it failed to become a significant commercial success.[24]

On December 22, 2015, Mitski signed withDead Oceans.[25] She announced her fourth studio album,Puberty 2, on March 1, 2016, and shared the lead single, "Your Best American Girl".[26] She released another single, "Happy", before the release of the album on June 17.[27] Produced by Hyland, the album was recorded over two weeks at Acme Studios inWestchester County, New York.[28] The album received widespread acclaim from music critics.[29] "Your Best American Girl" was named the 13th best song of the 2010s byRolling Stone.[30] Her song "Francis Forever" was covered byOlivia Olson as the characterMarceline the Vampire Queen in a 2016 episode of theCartoon Network showAdventure Time.[31]

On February 21, 2017,Pixies announced U.S. tour dates with Mitski as a supporting act.[32] On May 1, acompilation album consisting of 100 songs by various artists titledOur First 100 Days was released. It includes Mitski's cover ofOne Direction's song "Fireproof". The compilation aims to raise funds for organizations that support causes threatened byDonald Trump's proposed policies.[33] Mitski played a cover of the song in 2015, but that version has since been taken down.[34] Mitski also coveredFrank Sinatra's 1951 classic "I'm a Fool to Want You" for the7-Inches For Planned Parenthood compilation album.[35] On October 4, 2017,Lorde announced that Mitski would open for her on some dates on herMelodrama World Tour.[36] On November 1, a short film starring Mitski calledSitting was released.[37]

black and white photo of a young Asian-American woman with shoulder-length black hair singing.
Mitski performing at a concert inSeattle in October 2018

2018–2022:Be the Cowboy andLaurel Hell

[edit]

On April 20, 2018, Mitski teamed up with theexperimental bandXiu Xiu on the song "Between the Breaths" for the soundtrack of the sci-fi comedy filmHow to Talk to Girls at Parties, based on the short storyof the same name.[38]

On May 14, 2018, Mitski opened pre-orders for her fifth studio album,Be the Cowboy, and released the lead single, "Geyser", with an accompanying music video.[39] The second single and its video, "Nobody", was released on June 26, 2018,[40] which became an unexpected viral hit years after its release, largely due to TikTok.[41] The song’s chorus, where she repeatedly sings "Nobody", became widely used in TikTok trends, often paired with surreal memes or individuals running away from the camera.[42] This virality introduced Mitski’s music to a broader audience, leading to a significant streaming boost—Be the Cowboy re-entered Billboard’s Top 200 in 2021, three years after its release.[43]

The third and final single to precede the album, "Two Slow Dancers", was released on August 9 alongside a lyric video.[44]Be the Cowboy was released on August 17, through Dead Oceans.[45] It was critically acclaimed and named the album of the year byPitchfork,[46]Vulture,[47] andConsequence of Sound.[48]

On tour in 2018, Mitski began incorporating choreography into her live performances inspired byButoh, a form of dance theater developed in post-war Japan, in which "performers draw on chaotic internal emotions but depict them with precise, repetitive gestures." The approach reflected her wish to "give audiences something new" on her second headlining tour sinceBe the Cowboy's release, as well as a desire "to develop her own, idiosyncratic ways of maintaining a grip on an audience", since she'd learned "that the jumping around onstage, getting everyone pumped up, doesn't come naturally to me."[10] Mitski worked with performance artist Monica Mirabile to devise the tour's "highly stylized, sometimes unsettling" movements.[49][50] Butoh-influenced choreography was also used in her music video for "Working for the Knife".[51]

In August 2019, Mitski ended her hiatus from social media to post a statement denying allegations made by aTumblr user that she had been involved in a child trafficking ring: "I don't know the accuser, and I don't know how or why they have come to associate me with their trauma."[52][53][54]

In September 2019 at the final performance of herBe the Cowboy Tour in Central Park, Mitski announced that it would be her last indefinitely. She later talked about how she planned to quit music completely and "find another life". By early 2020, Mitski had changed her mind and decided to return to music, partly because she owed her label another album and partly for herself. She described making the decision to continue: "What it came down to was, ‘I have to do this even though it hurts me, because I love... This is who I am... I'm going to keep getting hurt, and I'm still going to do it, because this is the only thing I can do.’"[55]

Mitski performing in 2022, incorporatingButoh-inspired choreography

Mitski shared her new song, "Cop Car", in January 2020,[56] a never-released piece from the soundtrack ofThe Turning.[57] She was featured in the song "Susie Save Your Love" fromAllie X's album,Cape God, released in February 2020.[58]

On October 29, 2020, it was announced that Mitski would provide the soundtrack to the graphic novelThis Is Where We Fall. Thesci-fi Western story written by Chris Miskiewicz and Vincent Kings "unpacks themes of theology, death, and the afterlife". Of the project, Mitski said, "It was exciting to make a soundtrack for a comic book, It allowed me to work outside of my usual songwriting form and try to approach it like a score, but without any of the cues that come with working alongside a moving image, which ended up being both freeing and challenging. I hope the end result helps to immerse you in the story!"[59] Acountry song called "The Baddy Man" was released as the first preview from the soundtrack on March 5, 2021. Z2 Comics released the album oncassette with the standard hardcover novel on May 5, 2021. A limited-edition deluxe vinyl was also released. At the moment, Z2 has no plans to put the soundtrack on streaming services.[60]

On October 4, 2021, Mitski announced on her social media that she would be releasing a new single, "Working for the Knife", the next day as the lead single to her upcoming sixth studio album.[61] The song would later be named the 7th best song of 2021 byPitchfork.[62] Soon after the song's release, Mitski announced her 2022 European and North American tour.[63] She followed it up with "The Only Heartbreaker" on November 9, 2021.[64] The same day, Mitski announced her sixth studio album,Laurel Hell, would be released just before her European and North American tour, calledLaurel Hell Tour, on February 4, 2022.[65] On December 7, 2021, "Heat Lightning" was released as the third single from the album.[66] On January 12, 2022, "Love Me More" followed as the fourth single fromLaurel Hell.[67] In March 2022, "The Only Heartbreaker" peaked at number-one on theBillboardAdult Alternative Airplay chart.[68] On March 4, 2022, Mitski was announced as one of the performers for theGlastonbury Festival, scheduled for June 22–26, 2022.[69]

On April 19, 2022, Mitski's cover of "Glide", from the soundtrack ofAll About Lily Chou Chou, was released on streaming services. The song was previously available as abonus track on physical versions ofLaurel Hell and was used in the 2022 filmAfter Yang. Mitski appears on the song "This Is a Life" from the soundtrack for the 2022 filmEverything Everywhere All at Once.[70] The song also featuresDavid Byrne andSon Lux, for which she was nominated for anAcademy Award for Best Original Song in 2023.

2023–present:The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We

[edit]
Mitski performing atAll Points East festival in 2024

On July 23, 2023, Mitski announced her seventh studio album,The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We, with information on the first single, "Bug Like an Angel", which was released on July 26. The news was revealed via a voice memo she recorded at Bomb Shelter Studio inNashville, Tennessee, where the album was recorded. The voice memo was sent out to all subscribers of her newsletter.[71] The following two singles from the album, "Heaven" and "Star", were released on August 23, with the former premiering onBBC Radio 1.

In order to promote the new album in August of 2023, Mitski announced a series of cinema experiences. These experiences involved a pre-release listening party forThe Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We alongside a screening of a film chosen personally by Mitski: these films included Terrence Malick’sDays of Heaven, Donna Deitch’sDesert Hearts, Gus Van Sant’sDrugstore Cowboy and Federico Fellini’sLa Strada.[72]

Mitski also announced six concert dates set to take place in the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, and France. Mitski described these dates as "not a full-blown tour", but intimate and small enough to preview the album without elaborate stage production.[73][better source needed] She later added nineteen tour dates set to take place in the US in 2024.[74]

In November 2023, it was announced that Mitski was attached to write lyrics and music for aBroadway adaptation of the 1983 novelThe Queen's Gambit.[75]

In March 2024, Mitski participated in theSpotify Singles series. Accompanied by Patrick Hyland on acoustic guitar andJeni Magaña on double bass, she covered “Coyote, My Little Brother” and “Buffalo Replaced.”[76][77]

Musical style

[edit]

E. Alex Jung described her as "an artist whose music feels like being ushered into a private opera house of melodrama" with lyrics full of "roiling fury, destructive impulses, humiliation, longing, heartache, and hunger".[12] Angie Martoccio ofRolling Stone described her earlier albums as a "wry running commentary on twentysomething angst, raw desire, and often unrequited love".Lucy Dacus, a singer-songwriter who has at times opened for Mitski, described her music as "really visceral… She's connected to a part in herself that wants to scream. Maybe you don't live in a space where you can scream, or maybe you don't have the words for what has happened to you. Mitski provides a space for that."[55]

Similarly, Mitski has described her music as a place where people "can put all of their feelings, their ugliness, that doesn't have a place in their own lives."[4]

Public image

[edit]

In a 2016 interview withThe New York Times, Mitski described the tension of being a private person and her discomfort with the attention that comes with being in the public eye, therefore preferring to keep her personal life private.[78] Since her breakthrough in 2014, she has often been described as private by the press.[55]

As an Asian-American woman, Mitski has felt pressure to represent her community.[79]

Mitski is not active on social media, and the accounts under her name are run by a manager. She left social media in 2019, around the same time she quit music, because she felt it was unhealthy for her self-image.[55] However, she has gained massive popularity on social media. As of February 2022, her music has been featured in over 2.5 million videos on TikTok.[80] In 2021, former President of the United StatesBarack Obama included "The Only Heartbreaker" in his yearly list of top songs.[81]

Views on the music industry

[edit]

On September 9, 2019, at a show in Central Park, Mitski announced it would be her last show indefinitely, causing her fanbase to express their distress on social media. The reaction online to this announcement prompted her to tell her fans she was not going to quit music; however, at the time, she intended to quit music for good. She has stated her main reason for quitting was that she had a difficult time grappling with newfound indie stardom when her 2018 albumBe the Cowboy hit the mainstream.[55]

Mitski said the music industry felt like a "super-saturated version of consumerism",[82] and that in the industry "you have to be a product that's being bought and sold and consumed". She regrets using her actual name to release music because it no longer felt like it belonged to her, and she felt like "a foreigner" to herself.[12] She feared that by continuing to make music, eventually she would begin to create music she did not care about. In 2019, Mitski wrote a new single, "Working for the Knife", where she describes her "reluctance to return to the stage".[82] In February 2022, Mitski released a new recordLaurel Hell, returning to the music industry.[55]

Views on her fanbase

[edit]

Mitski has stated in interviews that she has an uneasy relationship with her fans because she finds their relationship to her and her music overwhelming.[83][84] She found the "worshipful commentary" about herself online damaging to her self-image.[80] Her fanbase has been described as "extremely online", "cultish",[4] and as rivaling "Taylor Swift andBTS in intensity, if not size".[83]

In a 2022 interview, she described the audience at one of her shows as "unrelenting". Recalling an instance where she had to proceed through an audience unescorted to her dressing room, she said: "Everyone needed a piece of me […] I was so overwhelmed by hands grabbing at me that I was crying."[4] In February 2022, Mitski tweeted out a statement asking fans to stop using their phones to record her shows, as "…it makes me feel as though we are not here together… When I'm on stage and look to you but you are gazing into a screen, it makes me feel as though those of us on stage are being taken from and consumed as content, instead of getting to share a moment with you."[85]

Personal life

[edit]

Mitski describes her cross-cultural identity as "half Japanese, half American but not fully either", a feeling that is often reflected in her music, which occasionally discusses issues of belonging.[86][87] Mitski has expressed discomfort with calling herself "Japanese American" or "Japanese",[88] and although she has described herself as "Asian American", she would rather "just say she's American".[12]

Since 2020, Mitski has resided inNashville, Tennessee.[55]

Discography

[edit]
Main article:Mitski discography

Awards and nominations

[edit]
AwardYearCategoryNominated workResultRef.
Academy Awards2023Best Original Song"This Is a Life"(withSon Lux andDavid Byrne)Nominated[89]
AIM Independent Music Awards2022International BreakthroughMitskiNominated[90]
Best Live PerformerWon
Best Creative CampaignLaurel HellNominated
Libera Awards2017Video of the Year"Your Best American Girl"Nominated[91]
2019Album of the YearBe the CowboyNominated[92]
Best Rock AlbumNominated
Creative PackagingNominated
Best Live ActMitskiNominated
Music Video of the Year"Nobody"Won
2023Best Alternative Rock RecordLaurel HellNominated[93]
Creative PackagingNominated
2024Record of the YearThe Land Is Inhospitable and So Are WeWon[94]
Best Alternative Rock RecordNominated
Marketing GeniusNominated
Best Short-Form VideoNominated
UK Music Video Awards2024Best Alternative Video – International"My Love Mine All Mine"Nominated[95]

References

[edit]
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