For my generation, Bon Iver was the height and decline of “indie” music. Only knowing “Skinny Love” marked you as a fake fan, especially if it was only the Birdy cover, but knowing all of For Emma, Forever Ago didn’t get you out of the clear either. It was a record that no one knew and then all of a sudden everyone knew. It was a time when Vampire Weekend had a #1 album on Billboard, The National released one of their most critically acclaimed records, an artist like Bon Iver could win a Grammy for Best New Artist for his second album, and Arcade Fire could win Album of the Year. As Jeremy Gordon of Spin summarized it, “‘SNL’ parodies and single-serving ‘Who is Bonnie Bear’ Tumblrs didn’t lie—Vernon was simultaneously a part of and apart from celebrity culture.”
It’s a record bathed in religious and lovelorn motifs: two concepts difficult to describe. It makes sense why Vernon turned to symbols to encompass the album, that or just a blatant failure at trying to combine more visual art into the music making process further than the album cover (oh shit, I went there anyway). But other than making it harder to refer to individual tracks in conversation, 22, A Million isn’t just Justin Vernon discovering distortion or experimenting like some absinth-induced synthesizer built with acoustic guitars and chainsaws. It’s still very much Bon Iver.
It’s a dark yet wonderfully, beautiful sounding record, and a great step forward sound wise and song writing wise for Bon Iver. “Over-hyped indie-folk-tronica” or not, Vernon’s right when he says “now I’m more than I am when we started.” It might seem a bit pretentious at times, but the dynamic has changed. “Indie” is honestly no more, and no “Skinny Love”-only fan is going to take this record lightly. There’s a new genre-bending mindset permeating through musicians these days, with certain similarities that’ve begun to poke out. Don’t get so wrapped up in at all, he hypocritically argues about the depth of the lyrics found in his music, “it might be over soon.”

