Maren Morris - Dreamsicle - Dreamsicle Colored Vinyl

Only 2 left
Regular price $28.99

Product details

  • Vendor Passion Planet Records

Do you have questions about this product?

Contact Us!

Maren Morris embraces her inner pop diva on her fourth album, 2025's sweetly flavored and chockablock with hooks Dreamsicle. While she made her name in Nashville, scoring big country-soul hits like "My Church," Morris has never been just a country singer. It's a feeling she underscored with her 2018 hit with Zedd"The Middle" and her effusive 2019 duet with Hozier "The Bones." Yet it's that earthy country soulfulness that is her hallmark, especially when working through life's struggles as she did on 2022's Humble Quest, an album that found her celebrating the birth of her first child and working through her feelings over the end of her marriage. While there's nothing as life-changing at the core of Dreamsicle, Morris nonetheless conjures big emotions that feel as grounded and real as anything she's done. Working with a close group of production collaborators, including Greg Kurstin, Jack Antonoff, Joel Little, Evan Blair, and others, Morris leans into a sonically varied vibe, moving between big melodic pop songs full of glassy '80s-inspired synths and buzzy, dayglow guitars and more intimately rendered numbers, many of which are imbued with a righteous, female-empowered energy. Part of the joy in Dreamsicle is hearing how good Morris' throaty, powerful vocal coo sounds when matched with a clubby groove, as on the sparkling 1975-esque "Cry in the Car." There's a sense that she's breaking away from both musical genre constraints and more personal emotional ones. It's a feeling she underscores on "Cut!," her ebullient duet with singer Julia Michaels that turns the daily life of a working actress into a feminist battle cry. They sing, "I'm screaming, 'Cut!'/I need a moment to just let my tears fall where they want." Tearful emotions do fall, even as Morris contrasts her heartbreak with infectious choruses, as she does on "Bed, No Breakfast" and "Push Me Over." There are also some interesting moments of musical experimentation, as in "People Still Show Up" with its jazzy, Steely Dan-esque bass line. Smartly, Morrisalso doesn't completely let go of her country roots, and tracks like "Too Good," with its multi-tracked, Dolly Parton harmonies and the delicately sparkling acoustic title-track, have a genuine Nashville singer/songwriter quality. She also balances the album's sugary highs with songs that dig deep into heartbreak, as on "This is How a Woman Leaves," her voice trembling with raw pathos. With Dreamsicle, Morris has made an album that's less of a statement about walking away from Nashville and country music and more about the transcendent creative freedom that comes with knowing who you are. ~ Matt Collar