Jared Bill - 'Unknown Country'

7/10

With his latest release 'Unknown Country', Jared Bill sets loose a string of puzzles and watches them wander off into the hills. This third record feels like a collection of parables overheard through a thin motel wall, delivering something funny, unsettling, strangely tender, and never quite resolved. It’s a lyrical maze where every turn offers a character, a contradiction, or a question that refuses to be answered cleanly.

Bill’s greatest strength has always been his pen, and here it sharpens into something more mischievous and philosophical. These songs behave like riddles dressed up as folk tales. On the surface, the narratives feel playful or absurd, but beneath the humour lies a quiet interrogation of identity, labour, and belonging. Nothing is explained outright. Meaning slips sideways, daring us to follow.

Musically, Unknown Country mirrors its lyrical oddness. The arrangements are deceptively relaxed, favouring understated grooves and familiar Americana textures, but they’re constantly nudged out of alignment. Rhythms feel slightly askew, melodies linger longer than expected, and Bill’s vocal delivery plays with timing in a way that keeps us alert. It’s music that sounds comfortable being uncomfortable.

There’s also a sense that geography itself is unstable here. Appalachia is treated as a mythic landscape; part memory, part hallucination. He uses setting the way some writers use dreams: loosely, symbolically, and with an eye toward emotional truth rather than realism. You’re never sure where you are, only how it feels to be there.

This is an album that rewards patience and curiosity. The more you sit with it, the more its strange internal logic reveals itself. Here, Jared Bill is more concerned with the slippery space between sense and nonsense, where stories feel truer because they don’t quite add up.

Unknown Country is funny, frustrating, and quietly profound, a reminder that sometimes the best maps are the ones that get you lost on purpose.

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