Skip to content

Long After Midnight

Robert Rackley
Robert Rackley
1 min read

Few musicians are as prolific as Jenn Wasner, the creative force behind Flock of Dimes. She has made much critically acclaimed music as both as Wye Oak and Flock of Dimes as well as collaborating with a host of others on their tunes My favorite project of hers is the Dungeonesse S/T album that came out nowhere in 2013 and made a forceful argument that the woman could do anything, even 80s-style hip-hop/R&B. Although Flock of Dimes has been more experimental in the past, on the just-released The Life You Save, Wasner goes for a more straightforward but augmented folk approach that fits her tales of addiction and relationship troubles.

Whether gently strumming her worn-out acoustic guitar in her living room while a succession of people strips her domicile bare as in the video for “Long After Midnight” or sitting in her bed in the video for “Keep Me in the Dark,” Wasner is able to emote her struggles beautifully. Her voice has a unique richness that conveys the heaviness of her life. The visuals for “Long After Midnight” illustrate the lyrical theme of loaning money to someone who sounds codependent. The song shows Wasner’s ability to mine the depths of relational difficulty for something universal.

Flock of Dimes - Long AFter Midnight (YouTube)

NoiseSaturday Night Video

Robert Rackley

Mere Christian, aspiring minimalist, inveterate notetaker, budget audiophile and paper airplane mechanic. Self-publishing since 1994.


Related Posts

Members Public

Portland Town

One of my greatest joys in 2026 has been the release of new material by British riot twee band Heavenly. I’ll admit I approached the release of this year’s brilliantly named Highway to Heavenly LP with a certain amount of skepticism. After decades of radio silence, it’s

Members Public

Hurts Like Hell

Charlotte Cornfield is the latest musician to put out something via Durham, NC’s Merge Records. Hurts Like Hell is also the first long player by the Canadian singer/songwriter since becoming a mother. The title track, “Hurts Like Hell,” wallows in a remembered sentimentality with the advantage of looking

Members Public

If You Change

Widowspeak has a new record coming this June and produced a video for the lead single, “If You Change.” I first heard the band when they covered Dire Straits’ “Romeo and Juliet,” a song that never landed with me previously. Widowspeak won me over with the wistful tenderness they gave