Ryan Beatty Attempts to Answer the Unanswerable in 'Calico'
Photo: Peter De Potter
Singer-songwriter Ryan Beatty has unveiled his third studio album, Calico, alongside a wistful visual accompaniment, overflowing with glowing pop introspections.
The lead single, âRibbons,â leads us into Calico with all the grace of a well-aimed heartbreak. Itâs both a deeply personal yet peaceful song, using doubled vocals and reverb to open the space one line at a time. Strings vignette the arrangement, acting as atmospheric representations of the trackâs melancholy. The line I keep going back to, out of the whole album, is the aching, âWhoâs gonna hold you when you sleep? / But itâs brave to be nothing to no one at all...â
âBruises Off the Peachâ is the sonic embodiment of coming to terms, whether it be with a relationship or your own inner turmoil. Its acoustic guitar dances like light off a lake while the cavernous reverb of the vocals slowly narrows into a warmer, settled sound. It grows to answer its own repeated question, spinning the grief-fueled crooning of âWhat did it ever have to do with me?â into a meditative statement by the song's culmination.
âCinnamon Breadâ stands out with its cinematic strings and wandering piano that waltzes to its own plot line alongside the lyrics, while âAndromedaâ winds through moments of close, raw vocals and stacks of lush harmonies. âBright Redâ feels like an intermission of sorts, swirling and swaying over a cyclical progression. It feels less contained in its own moment, which seems to be an overarching theme for the album, crying out through reflective lyrics.
The seven-minute journey of âHunterâ exists somewhere between Fleet Foxesâ âWhite Winter Hymnalâ and the cult TV show Twin Peaks. Itâs haunting yet soothing, detail-oriented yet expansive. Beatty holds our hand and guides us through the vision of Calico in this exploratory song. It has a similar sonic palette as the visuals of the accompanying Calico film, which is glowing and nostalgic in all the right, wistful ways.
We continue to witness Beattyâs cinematic storytelling in âWhite Teeth,â mottled with vibrant imagery. In complementary fashion, âMultiple Endingsâ is a more intimate conversation, directive and deliberately sparse in its production, leaving room for the lyrical delivery. Beatty finishes out with âLittle Faith,â leaving listeners with a ghost of Calico echoing even after its end. He repeats, âWhatâs it gonna take? Have a little faith...â
At its core, thatâs the essence of Calicoâthe unanswerable question intertwining with graceful acceptance. Ryan Beattyâs words and melodies flow uninhibited throughout this album, bolstered by the lucid string arrangements and guitars. Itâs a transformative step for the visionary singer-songwriter, an intimate and admirable embrace.
Listen to Calico below: