Do you realize—or even remember—how exciting My Morning Jacket felt for a five-year span, two decades ago? Just after the start of this millennium, they were the inland answer to the rise of New York’s sleek rock’n’roll cool, the Kentucky longhairs who harnessed the spirit of their Southern rock predecessors but had panoramic artistic ambitions, too. At Dawn was a mystical country rock wonder, Jim James’ falsetto cresting like the sun over a canyon. It Still Moves was the stuff of accidental guitar gods, of a band that nearly broke itself from so much touring but survived long enough to capture at least some of its onstage phosphorescence. And Z brilliantly answered a question no one else had bothered to ask: What if some posi dudes who knew it was pronounced ‘Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd’ also knew what made Radiohead so compelling? It always seemed fitting that My Morning Jacket’s legendary 2004 performance at Bonnaroo—capturing the lightning of a band sprinting between their two best albums, during a summer downpour—was dubbed “Thunderdome”: My Morning Jacket felt like a fucking power source.
But in the 20 years since, as My Morning Jacket has become a respectable institution that hosts and headlines festivals and hometown soirees, anyone who cared has waited in vain for that thrill to return. After self-consciously trying to shirk their Southern ties on 2008’s calamitous Evil Urges, a record once presented as “the album of their lives,” 2011’s half-interesting Circuital was touted as a “return to form,” a classic stratagem for a band with a flagging vision. A 2015 profile loudly praised that year’s very OK The Waterfall as their “best album in a decade,” though they’d only made two others. It all felt a little like apologia for middle-aged male mediocrity, hoping for the frisson of youth to return like magic. They’ve since tried three distinct strategies to get back: revisiting years-old recordings on the pleasant The Waterfall II, snipping and stitching bits of jams into a top-heavy self-titled LP, and, on the declaratively titled is, yielding control for the first time ever to a new-to-them producer, Brendan O’Brien. Alas, the wait continues.
The story they’re offering this time around certainly sounds good: After infamous struggles with the injuries and indignities of the road, the members of My Morning Jacket have found excitement in mid-40s contentment. “I don’t think we’ve ever felt younger or more alive than we do now,” drummer Patrick Hallahan said last year, attributing some of that to sobriety. What’s more, the prospect of working with O’Brien seemed to supercharge them, prompting more than 100 demos in two extended writing sessions. James made rough recordings in his home studio and wrote still more when the band finally rendezvoused with O’Brien at what was once the fabled A&M.