Indie Rock's Latest 'Savior' Isn't There Yet
Briefly

Near the end of his new album, Manning Fireworks, MJ Lenderman deadpans over a crunchy guitar riff, "Every day is a miracle / Not to mention a threat." That could be a Zen koan about the human condition or just a tidy summary of how the sad-sack characters in his songs view the world.
Across four studio albums, the 25-year-old indie-rocker has cultivated an image as the world's highest-achieving slacker, a small-town guy whose passion for drinkin' belies a sneaky perceptiveness and a wry, unexpectedly bleak sense of humor.
For the uninitiated, Lenderman is a singer-songwriter out of Asheville, North Carolina, who's both the lead guitarist in the band Wednesday and a solo act, recording fairly traditionalist alt rock with a country flair and oddball lyrics that blurs the line between goofy and profound.
Two years after he broke out with the comparatively lo-fi Boat Songs, music journalists have identified Manning Fireworks as an opportunity to open the floodgates, deeming Lenderman everything from a generational talent to 'the guitarist who could make indie rock big again.'
Read at Vulture
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