Sharon Van Etten: Tramp
It’s not often that an artist progresses as purposefully as Sharon Van Etten has over the course of her first three albums. Starting with her 2009 debut Because I Was In Love, a voice-and-guitar-centered collection of break-up songs, through 2010’s instrumentally and emotionally bolstered Epic and the new Tramp, there’s a clear through-line in Van Etten’s work pointing to a continuous musical and thematic evolution. With production by The National’s Aaron Dessner and featuring a small galaxy of indie-rock luminaries appearing in guest-star roles—including Julianna Barwick, Wye Oak’s Jenn Wasner, and the Walkmen’s Matt Barrick—Tramp is Van Etten’s most confident-sounding album to date, pushing at the boundaries of her music and suggesting a turn away from the romantic wound-licking that has dominated her lyrics. Love and Epic were “cry alone in the car” albums, but Tramp is made of sterner stuff, capping Van Etten’s introductory trilogy with a forceful statement of perseverance and rebirth.