Ten years after it's release, Wye Oak's Civilian remains a raw, sinewy punch of a record-bleak
and intense and lonely and self-assured all at once. The album unravels with the sort of self questioning and uncertainty that come with youth, and it's specific confidence in unflinchingly
probing all of those emotions, feeling them to their deepest extent even when it's tearing you
apart at the seams. When Andy Stack and Jenn Wasner released Civilian, it marked both the
ascension and death of Wye Oak, or at least a version of it. Now, a decade later, Civilian + Cut
All the Wires: 2009-2011 delves back into that pivotal record and adds a lost album of unreleased
tracks and demos to Civilian's universe.
Ten years after it's release, Wye Oak's Civilian remains a raw, sinewy punch of a record-bleak
and intense and lonely and self-assured all at once. The album unravels with the sort of self questioning and uncertainty that come with youth, and it's specific confidence in unflinchingly
probing all of those emotions, feeling them to their deepest extent even when it's tearing you
apart at the seams. When Andy Stack and Jenn Wasner released Civilian, it marked both the
ascension and death of Wye Oak, or at least a version of it. Now, a decade later, Civilian + Cut
All the Wires: 2009-2011 delves back into that pivotal record and adds a lost album of unreleased
tracks and demos to Civilian's universe.