Genevieve Stokes Immortalizes Emotion in Its Rawest Form in 'Catching Rabbits'
Photo: Abbie Pitre
Songwriting visionary Genevieve Stokes has returned to her post as indie popâs dark academia icon with her new EP, Catching Rabbits.
Thereâs an ode to early 2000s indie songwriting in the EPâs opener, âHabits.â I hear some Regina Spector quirkiness in the bouncing acoustic piano, while notes of Fiona Apple dance in the rolling drumbeat and moody chord progression. Stokesâ embrace of her originality is admirableâthe scarlet hues of the piano that lives at the heart of this EP become a signature for the artistâs tone. "Habitsâ showcases Stokesâ ability to curate a production style that is both ethereal and clean. The warm, piano-driven track is decorated with unexpected nuances like plucked synth strings, chiming bells, and rhythmic, breathless background vocals.
âYou & Meâ flows on a heartbeat of lush harmony layers. Stokes cycles through the line âitâs never enough,â instilling a different meaning into each repetition throughout the outro: from bitterness to grief, realization to complacency. Meanwhile, âCan Iâ pulses with excited urgency as amber-hued drums patter eagerly beneath a percussive melody.
Weâre given a moment to reflect in âBook of Memories,â which guides us along a stream-of-consciousness recall of a relationship. This track feels delicate to me in the way that the pages of a vintage book might crumble in your hands with too heavy of a touchâmuch like the nature of love itself. The minimalistic production lets âBook of Memoriesâ breathe into its fragility, draping ambient strings and distant percussion over the flushed piano. The accompanying music video is the perfect Genevieve Stokes visualizer, where the indie songwriter and a plague doctor break up in reverse, running hand in hand through a burning landscape. Itâs both unsettling and touching, existing in this mildly Victorian aesthetic that Stokes cultivates.
âThis EP is more introspective and experimental than my first project and I think it reflects a change in my connection to reality and the relationships in my life,â Stokes. ââCatching Rabbitsâ is my more uplifting take on the phrase âchasing rabbitsââ that itâs possible to achieve what seems out of reach, and to escape the tempting illusions of the mind.â
âMaraâ is an intimate dedication told equally through its words and composition. The arrangement in this track is particularly emotive, spiraling anxiously in the verses to then settle in the chorus, illustrating the impact of the songâs subject, Mara. We donât even know Mara, but we feel the relief of her touch, of the soft wave of her words that Stokes washes over us in the sigh of the chorus.â17â leaves us with the question, do you really want that or were you told to be someone else at seventeen? It's a proper cliff hanger to represent the introspection of Catching Rabbits, closing out the EP with the distant sound of water lapping at a shore.
Listen to Catching Rabbits below: