so often i see people magnify mitski to be this flawless deity whose music is above us, which has never made sense to me since her lyrics are all so… human 😭?? she’s had to restate that so many times that i think the glorification is really an injustice to her. loved this video!!
She is indeed very human, they're just shocked at how articulate and metaphorically unique her lyrics are because you know...simpletons. They lack creativity themselves, so they put Mitski on a pedestal for being the artist that she is. While she's great, she's still real and shouldn't be treated as otherwise because if anything it's doing her a disservice, as you said.
This is exactly what I’m trying to say like I love Mitski, but I don’t like when people try to put it on a pedestal and act like she’s the most perfect human on earth. She’s human too she isn’t perfect she has flaws just like we all do
Even if she was private... so what?! She is a person that delimits the knowledge of her, that's amazing and really priveleged to keep in a world where our personas and identities are marketable. She doesn't owe nothing to no one lmao.
@@giuliab8484 whats the inherent connection between authenticity and one’s inclination or desire to communicate themselves to others? Surely one could be ‘authentic’ and also be extremely open? I say this not to be combative 😅 but because I’m slowly becoming convinced that some of our notions surrounding authenticity are bs at worst or confused at best.
@@mauve9266 You’re right. But I think she’s authentic because she isn’t doing something JUST because other are. By that I mean that she doesn’t overshare like other celebrities do
it sucks to see that most of the mitski fans like her for all the wrong reasons, despite her being such a genuine artist who actually cares about the art
There's this video on YT of Mitski performing Love Me More live, she's bathed in blue light, entering from the back of the stage and you just start hearing the crowd go WILD for her. So much, that you can hear this girl screaming at the top of her lungs for half the song as if she's seeing god, which is such an interesting juxtaposition to Mitski singing such a raw song with so much human emotion, she almost looks alone on that stage. It kind of feels like performance art. Anyway, loved your video and your insight as an artist made this so personal. i'm a new fan for sure.
lmao what? Do you listen only to 4 pop artists? There are plenty of underrated musicians that are as weird, authentic and talented as Mitski, and there will always be more after them. It's not because you haven't discovered them yet that Mitski is the modern equivalent of Mozart lol
Class of 2013 and my bodys made of crushed little stars are my favourite songs of hers. Mitski makes such direct songs. They're short but incredibly immense.
i've been listening to her stuff for a few years and have found it very real and raw. i didn't interact with the fandom but the reverence and "SHE CREATED EVERYTHING" some people have for her is so odd to me. she's a human, we don't know her, we know her music. and it's beautiful. but you have to draw a line.
I've been a fan of Mitski for a while, and for a long time, I just listening to her music on Spotify and that was that. Only recently I switched to UA-cam music, and in doing so, I began to see comments about her/ what her community perception is. I was surprised to see people saw her as private! Her songs--while not necessarily literally about her--are very intimate, vulnerable, and personal. I have a hunch (no actual research and not too much thought--hence hunch) that artists labelled as "private" are those that attempt to avoid interacting with their fans directly. For example, some artists might do Q/A's, respond to comments, and embrace fan jokes. Not doing so is "being private." But to me, it's not about privacy, it's about what you prioritize pursuing, and maintaining mental health.
I agree. A lot people think and artist is ''private'' because they don't interact or post a lot about themselves on social media, like posting casual pictures, doing live streams, etc. But fans can honestly become demanding and invasive. I used to follow mitski on facebook around the time bury me at makeout creek was released, and she shared a lot of more personal moments, like little videos and stuff like that. As she gained a bigger following she didn't really post as herself anymore, and it became more of an official channel to promote music and tours, I think it was a good way to establish boundaries. I personally like to know that the artists I follow can have a personal life in peace, and I don't really want to know about it, because they sharing their music is enough.
exactly, the way fan culture is now musicians are expected to sell not just their music but their body, their personality, their identity. its honestly sickening to me.
My body is made of crushed little stars has such a innate symbolism for me. I have lived through an abusive situation that made me a broken, suicidal, depressed person, and I believe the only thing that kept me alive is work. I wanted to leave, I wanted to be happy and successful, I wanted love but I couldn’t find it, and being a workaholic obsessive hopeful mess at least gave me goals. Mundanity was the only thing that allowed me to be grounded, the only thing I could do to survive. I love the way this song basks in the mundane, seeing it as absurd, but powerful.
A lovely look into an often overlooked aspect of music. The best guitarist I know is an accountant. Sometimes it’s enough to be boring by day and adventurous by night.
i've been a fan of mitski since before her commercial or critical acclaim. in high school i would listen to every single one of her albums on loop every day because her music truly expressed the depression and heartbreak i was going through. the yearning she expresses in her music is unlike no other artist. her relationship with her fans is so interesting, because she loves them so much but she also hates being so publicly perceived. the constant push and pull between her love of music and her desire to be alone and at peace. i feel very happy for her that she's been able to find that balance, and i genuinely have thought she was going to quit music at least three times during the time i've been following her career, especially after hearing I Guess. i am so grateful she isn't quitting, and i hope the people who have found her through tiktok and social media will continue to help her feel comfortable with sharing such deep parts of herself. and if I had the money to pay mitski to carol in my home... god! her christmas carols on youtube are gorgeously haunting
I’m so interested by how the music industry reflects the greater economy. There are a very small number of people taking most of the attention and money, while the vast majority are struggling to garner any attention or cover basic costs.
The excerpt you read out loud at 13:46 kind of blew my mind. This recurring idea is spewed a lot surrounding the legacies behind music artists, that "a good, interesting music artist is a tortured music artist", and I had always thought that it was a coincidence, that tortured music artists aren't good just because of what they go through. but hearing a similar message coming from someone whose music I listen to really tears down the fourth wall for me. I just thought that all of those people spewing this sentiment were just speculating about the creative process and success behind these handful of artists who just to happen to struggle in one way or another, but to hear from a real source that sometimes they chase those situations that compromise their well-being just for "the song" feels so transparent that it's off-putting. I wonder who first spread this idea that artists must struggle, and how it became so pervasive that actual artists began pursuing their own suffering because they believed in it so much, that it would enrich their perspective for a song or two. from the sound of it, it doesn't feel like the music industry cares about artists all that much if that's the kind of environment that's being fostered in those spaces. I admire mitski so much, and it concerns but also saddens me that a young mitski ever believed she had to inflict any kind of emotional pain upon herself in order to appear interesting in her music and to her fans. I respect her music so deeply, I view her body of work as almost a home of all her past emotions and experiences immortalized. that's also just why I appreciate any form of art in general, it gives you a chance to take a feeling, maybe even a feeling that seems so invisible that it doesn't feel like your suffering even holds a place in reality, and put it somewhere where you can prove that it's real and see it for yourself. it gives you permission to expand upon it, elaborate it on it, and then move on from it. sometimes it feels like such a disservice to move on from a stage of your life without properly addressing it with yourself, like an "all of that pain and I can't talk about it" kind of feeling. even when you legitimately don't identify with it anymore, you think about who you were when you were immersed in all of it, and you want to validate yourself with a tribute to who you were and what you saw, even if it's a version that doesn't exist quite the same way. mitski's discography feels exactly like that. it's like a house for all of her past grievances that have their own place, that deserve recognition even if she can't remember how that time in her life felt like anymore, and I just find that so very rich and remarkable. I remember in one interview, she talked about how she would build up on certain emotions that were usually triggered from something rather mundane by setting a fictional scene or using characters to convey those emotions in a presentable way for her music. she used Me and My Husband as an example of this, how she used the archetype of a lonely housewife to expand upon a certain feeling she associates with or imposes on that character referenced from a less fashionable situation and real person who was there to feel it. when she had said that in her interview, she just reassured her own brilliance in my mind, and I found great solace in that statement. even if an emotion or experience looks trivial, it's still worth the art and the act of dressing-up. I love the idea of immortalizing periods in your life within art because it pays tribute to yourself and what you've endured, big or small, loud or incredibly quiet. I'm bringing all of this up, and I'm finally wrapping up my comment thank god, to look back on her music and think about how some of those emotions could have been sought after for the purpose of the art itself, and how it alarms me. I wonder what songs she was referring to when she said this, and if they were even released. still, I think that even if some of that pain was pursued rather than an organic experience, it captures a certain headspace in her life where she believed that was required of her to be a good artist. it still unintentionally captures a separate kind of unique, sidestepped pain, even if that wasn't the focal point of the product to begin with. whether that pain was felt in the moment or something to be gained for a product, it still captures a picture, doesn't it? I have a lot of admiration for mitski and her candor, and I hope she knows that it's not the suffering in her songs that makes her interesting, it's what she makes of it and how she transforms it into something that is undeniably hers, that cannot be replicated by anyone else because they don't share her mind or her hands. I still have not found any music quite like mitski's. I hope she continues to immortalize visceral images and stories from her life, and also that she now knows that a lot of us would rather she be boring and happy than "interesting" but in a hole, but we all know her talent is undeniable. it can never be retracted by a change in tune, that is hers to own. I know she particularly grappled with that dilemma while producing her past album, how she wanted to produce more uplifting melodies without jeopardizing the respect and mutual understanding she's gained from her listeners who still wanted more somber tracks. I think this next upcoming album will finally reject this sentiment and be a tangible process of healing, one that perhaps a young mitski needed to hear in order to learn what she knows now. this does make me wonder about how many artists from the past and present believed in this toxic idea, though. how many iconic artists led with this mantra that they must suffer to succeed? I wonder how many of these artists that we regarded as "tortured, but talented" were also in on it, too. it really does speak to the fact that you can be lost and fragmented, as long as it's consumable. i can only hope more artists stop lusting after their own self-degradation for a product as we all grow wiser. edit: shit ton of grammatical errors lmao
This comment is absolutely gorgeous I feel like I just read a whole essay. A lot of the stuff you said reminded me of her song geyser as a think that song was written about this subject. The lyric ‘feel the harmony only when it’s harming me’ comes to mind, and I love how the rest of the song talks about loving music as an art form and expression as mitski has said herself before. Separating it from using pain and suffering to create rather than creating for her own joy. She is truly an incredible artist.
@@First_love_late_spring I'm so glad you brought up Geyser and I can't believe I forgot about when she said that. songs like Geyser, among many others like Carry Me Out, Last Words of a Shooting Star, Pink in the Night, and now Star, are all individual reasons as to why her music is so special. if mitski didn't put the pen to the paper and record those distinct, visceral feelings she was treading, we would have never learned about them. I just find that practice invaluable and worth the time it takes to make that music. I'm glad that mitski cares as deeply about it as her fans do, but I hope she can find a way to do it that won't feel like what she describes in Geyser. and I'm thankful that she's willing to share those moments with us in her music. this is the kind of music that makes you a legacy.
@@mooncake386 I don't know what to say other than it is so refreshing to see someone so passionate about an artist's work and their experience facing consumption while trying to retain their core authenticity. Thank you for sharing your thoughts, will continue to ponder them throughout the day 🫶
@@KateBrunotts thanks so much! it took a long time writing all of that but your video really got me thinking and made me want to share a lot of things I had always thought about mitski and the act of art in general. after your video I realized that a person can be open in more ways than one, even if they're not spouting every thought to the online world for their fans to consume.
This is hands down the best comment I have read in UA-cam about anything, you are marvelous with words! I truly love Mitski but you had made me fall in love with her art even more! Thanks for sharing your vision!
I feel like people tend to forget that artists are human too. This "fame" makes it seem like they're a different entity, when really they're just unique humans(cuz everyone is unique) with the same kinds of worries or struggles others may have. Mitski saying that people would be disappointed to meet her is actually so sad, the expectations artists have to bear are insane. People need to realize that at the end, artists are humans too. I appreciate Mistki whether its for her music or for her overall actual personality, all she's being is human, and that's quite normal id say. My point is, that no one should even have the right to be "disappointed" on knowing or meeting her, because she's human like every other person out there!!!! ☺💖
@10:48 - Having a solid day job has made being a musician SO MUCH more enjoyable for me. I'm able to worry about the art and not worry about how much I'm gonna make from a show.
I'm on the fence with this... of course I want my listeners to connect with me as a person, and for other artists to know it's totally normal to have a job (or jobs) to fund your art. but when interviewers ask me what my "dailly routine" looks like or if I have a job outside of music... I still don't feel comfortable answering. because I don't want anyone to show up at my job (or for my coworkers to find out I make music). what's ironic is, one of my coworkers is actively a musician in a well-known local band. out of respect for his privacy I don't ask any questions about the music, I actually hadn't heard of his band til he mentioned it in passing, but I just want to respect the boundary between artists in the art world vs artists in the real world... idk if this makes sense. but I'm kinda just treating him how I'd want people to treat me. also, the nature of my job is confidential anyway, I wouldn't be able to talk about it in detail even if I wanted to. and now I feel like Hannah Montana, keeping secrets in both worlds.
This so valid! Sometimes we aren't at liberty or the confines of corporate/art world create too much of a gap. It's also a weird thing when you realize there's utility in sharing yourself when it comes to finding a home for your music... it can be difficult to draw proper boundaries! Love that you're building an environment that works for you
wow its weird i love in an age where even the obscure artists I'm unsure ppl know about even have videos of so much footage about them. I loved every second of this and realize Mitski is actually kinda far from obscure even though nobody else in my circles listen to her. :/
The internet can be cool sometimes. I head you though, didn't have a lot of people who shared the same music taste as myself growing up, happy to have communities like these in the meantime
She does have, I think, more boundaries than the average celebrity. They’re more than reasonable but I think people are unaccustomed with singers being like that. And it’s something I appreciate, because honestly I think she’s right if I met her I would probably be disappointed. That’s not saying she’s a bad person irl or anything like that, just that my vision of her in my mind is probably not super accurate, and frankly it does not have to be accurate to be an amazing artistic influence in my life.
Having a full time day job and being a professional artist in honestly something I think is mostly reserved for type-A neurotypicals, in the long run. I know people with neurodivergences who do or did it, and usually they either transition to being full time creatives who have to deal with artistic constraints and deadlines - or they flame out, hard.
@@darksharkk yes! I don’t have any photos I don’t think I even took one but she was at the merch table when I bought bury me at make out creek! It was a very small show
This is so relatable as someone in the fashion industry (or trying to be lol) I have fully accepted that I cant really be an artsy fashion designer and make a living, I will try to get a technical job in the fashion industry at some big shitty fashion brand and then be creative when I get home from work lol.
I love this perspective. We’re so used to people, especially people with an audience, being “on” all the time, that Mitski’s relaxed approched to self-promotion and branding seems lacking, when it’s more than people were expected to do ten, fifteen years ago. We should resist the multiples of labor (unpaid labor in fact!) that are getting attached to creative jobs in general.
a really interesting video! i'm graduating high school this year and art has always been a really big part of my life, and i'm thinking of basically giving it up seriously. i originally did it for financial purposes but the more i read into things and the more i listened to this video i agree that there's also a lot of freedom when you don't make creativity your full time job. your voice is so nice to listen to and i was able to finish my sister's bday card while learning a lot more, great video again!!
I like your message, it’s something I tell my friends. I love to paint & make music but I don’t wanna be a struggling artist. I rather work my day job & create when I have time , bc at the end of the day it is my hobby , something that makes me happy, whenever it does start to make me more money…then I’ll drop the day job . Until then I’ll do both frl
Mitski's music is like noone else's. I found it around 15yo and have become a big fan since appreciating her music more and more as i'm getting older. She saved me 🙏 i love her personality and how rawly human she is in the interwievs.
this is so important for so many of her fans to hear! she speaks so openly about what her music means and her opinions on the industry and people just gloss over it to project their own views onto it as fact
im so glad someones finally bringing up all the interviews! ive watched so many and a lot of her live shows. ive dug deep just to see her in all aspects of music. its freedom.
It would be fine if mitski quits honestly, her songs will still be streamed for years to come, then she could sit back in the ordinary life again. Theres so many criticism on her fans putting her on a pedestal lately, i mostly think of them as jokes when i see them.. am i understanding right that this is part of the problem? if not, then i dont get all this at all. I enjoyed the quotes on this video though :)
I’m a 15 year old and 3 years ago I got into Mitskis music and went to her concert and now I am absolutely in love with her work but she’s so misunderstood and her songs are always categorized wrong and stereotyped by different apps
I really enjoyed this realistic and yet optimistic outlook on what being an artist (for me illustrator) looks like for the majority of people. This somehow gave me a little hope for my future and that things will be okay, even with struggle.
as someone who's probably going to have a desk job at an arts organization/non profit in the future to give myself enough money to fund my music/films, i really appreciate you including that in your video. i think i fall into the rare category of artists who would get insanely burnt out if i did art full time. i'm currently going to school for music and film and i've noticed stigma with not wanting to describe the job you have outside of art started almost immediately in freshman year. the music industry specifically has soooo much stigma surrounding needing to have a day job, i hope one day we're eventually able to talk/joke about the jobs we have outside of music as openly as actors. this was such a good video on mitski!! i've been such a big fan of her's since i saw her in 2019, i really enjoyed getting to hear your thoughts on her art and how they relate to you
It's odd how quickly other artist denounce those who derive their income from other places, and I AGREE! Haha I am always doing the most random jobs to keep the lights on. Thank you for taking the time to watch, really appreciate this thoughtful comment 💖
as an artist i loved this video!! please keep making videos amplifying the artists actual voices- they so often get lost in the excitement of the music
I decided to just dive headlong into singing/songwriting. I used to have a part-time job at a Panera years ago, but the pandemic and getting laid off gave me a good excuse to pursue music fulltime. I busk and record my sessions almost every day that I can, and it seems like I'm BARELY able to make ends meet. People have recommended that I secure a part-time job, but the truth is, I already spend about 8 hours every day performing/reviewing/editing and more hours practicing/writing/composing, then I need to set aside time to cook myself meals, go shopping, unwind. The truth is, I am nowhere near as experienced in the industry as Mitski is, but I think another truth is that everyone will go through different experiences in their music journey. Mitski describes freedom to be a double-edged sword, but to me, it is the ultimate validation that I have personal value and there's nothing more valuable in the world than the idea that you "think" you matter. Even though I am skipping meals or waiving insurance, if I were to choose between music or a decent living, I'd pick music in a heartbeat. I think one of the biggest problem with this industry is that the nature of it being consumerist means that musicians (esp those who are starting off) undervalue themselves. It has reached such a plateau that professional-level musicians are afraid to ask for $20 dollars for an hour-long live show, which perpetuates this stigma among non-musicians that music isn't the sum of thousands of hours of work. I want to believe things will get better if we just wait a few decades (if we introduce universal basic income, if there are more proactive programs to financially assist artists, better rates for streaming services, etc.), but right now, the best we can do is grind it out and hope that we can forward a better culture around the arts.
This is a great take! Currently, I'm just doing music on the side and seeing where that goes. I'm a content writer by day, and I'm so grateful that I get to be creative in my day job. All the love and respect for Mitski. I hope she finds happiness 🔮❤️
while this is a very sweet video and it's nice to hear your perspective.... generally... all people mean when they say mitski is "private" is that she used to have a lot of social media that she would post casually on, making goofy jokes and whatnot, but then she got popular, took a hiatus, and came back and her social media is all more professional now. not a huge deal, and totally fine, she's just not shitposting about Spiderman on Tumblr anymore.
13:58 honestly this is why I've always related to Mitski. I've done similar things before when she talked about relationships and sort of doing it for the art and the plot sort of? I've done the same thing out of wanting to make something beautiful out of that pain and wanting to finally hurt enough to feel valid? She's so human and she's the only artist I've been able to relate to this much
SHE. PLAYED. RIBS. I fell in love with Mitski through the Melodrama tour, too :D And I rarely go to shows, so it was such a lucky coincidence! Thanks for the insight into working artist life and for sharing those quotes. I feel informed & appreciative of you & Mitski both
Just found your channel and I feel like I've found a kindred spirit. I've actually done an analysis of an artist named Hwasa who I love for the same reasons you love Mitski, especially because she's a KPOP artist and that industry is (possibly) the most image driven and inauthentic. Sincerity and REAL authenticity has really gone out of style in music so when I find an artist who is holding onto those qualities my respect for them is immense. Thank you for this video. Loving music and not chasing a lifestyle is important because creating true art actually makes a difference in the world (at least I think so). Keep doing what you're doing 🫡
Also. As a big Mitski fan who has talked to a lot of Mitski fans, the younger you are, the more they try to idealize Mitski. Older Mitski fans have gone past that. (By old/young I mean how long they’ve been fans in relation to their age.)
my first time watching your channel, and I just want to say that you look and sound like a gracious princess from some old movie or something! idk your whole presence and aura is really warm and soothing. I don't even listen to mitski or know anything about her, I literally pressed on this vid by accident, but I'm hooked now and I'm having a great time. I guess it's time to listen to mitski now 😅
this is a great video, i don't know much about mitski's music but this applies to my favorite artist and it was great to see the perspective of a musician :)
heres my question, how do i hold a day job as a person in the industry? im expected to tour but to tour is to leave for months on end. how the fuck do i keep a job doing that
That's a great point. No idea lol haven't made it that far on my own, but I'd imagine even if you can work remotely it's nearly impossible just by the sheer amount of energy playing multiple back to back shows and traveling takes
please please please anyone who is seeing this comment go read Mitski's 27 bad survival tips. It's old, but I think It's the closest she has ever gotten to us. It made me think a lot about her but also about my own life.
so often i see people magnify mitski to be this flawless deity whose music is above us, which has never made sense to me since her lyrics are all so… human 😭?? she’s had to restate that so many times that i think the glorification is really an injustice to her. loved this video!!
Couldn't agree more, thank you so much for listening ❤️
She is indeed very human, they're just shocked at how articulate and metaphorically unique her lyrics are because you know...simpletons. They lack creativity themselves, so they put Mitski on a pedestal for being the artist that she is. While she's great, she's still real and shouldn't be treated as otherwise because if anything it's doing her a disservice, as you said.
This is exactly what I’m trying to say like I love Mitski, but I don’t like when people try to put it on a pedestal and act like she’s the most perfect human on earth. She’s human too she isn’t perfect she has flaws just like we all do
It’s a joke lmaoooo
But she invented music
mitskis art is so human. she captures human emotion in such raw, vulnerable way.
💖
asa mitaka and mitski u r just like me
Even if she was private... so what?! She is a person that delimits the knowledge of her, that's amazing and really priveleged to keep in a world where our personas and identities are marketable. She doesn't owe nothing to no one lmao.
THIS! We need more people like you lol
this. this feels like a breath of fresh air
One of the reasons I love her. She’s very authentic and it shows because she doesn’t feel the need to let everyone know everything about herself
@@giuliab8484 whats the inherent connection between authenticity and one’s inclination or desire to communicate themselves to others? Surely one could be ‘authentic’ and also be extremely open? I say this not to be combative 😅 but because I’m slowly becoming convinced that some of our notions surrounding authenticity are bs at worst or confused at best.
@@mauve9266 You’re right. But I think she’s authentic because she isn’t doing something JUST because other are. By that I mean that she doesn’t overshare like other celebrities do
it sucks to see that most of the mitski fans like her for all the wrong reasons, despite her being such a genuine artist who actually cares about the art
!!!
For real
There's this video on YT of Mitski performing Love Me More live, she's bathed in blue light, entering from the back of the stage and you just start hearing the crowd go WILD for her. So much, that you can hear this girl screaming at the top of her lungs for half the song as if she's seeing god, which is such an interesting juxtaposition to Mitski singing such a raw song with so much human emotion, she almost looks alone on that stage. It kind of feels like performance art.
Anyway, loved your video and your insight as an artist made this so personal. i'm a new fan for sure.
What a fascinating contrast. Thanks for watching 💖
Mitski is one of the last true musical artists left, in my opinion. She's so delightfully weird, I love her so much 😅 truly underrated.
She is so incredible 🫶 Absolutely!
lmao what? Do you listen only to 4 pop artists? There are plenty of underrated musicians that are as weird, authentic and talented as Mitski, and there will always be more after them. It's not because you haven't discovered them yet that Mitski is the modern equivalent of Mozart lol
the only thing we’ll always have as a species is art. so no, she’s not the last.
Last? Hyperbole is a mental illness
@@Maude_Ti don’t think that’s what they meant 😭
Class of 2013 and my bodys made of crushed little stars are my favourite songs of hers. Mitski makes such direct songs. They're short but incredibly immense.
She's incredible, true mark of a great artist, lots of depth yet concise
My body is made of crushed little stars is so incredible and it’s definitely my favorite song too. It’s just so powerful.
i love my body's made of crushed little stars, it's really short so i play it like 10 times a row
I need my body's made of crushed little stars and drunk walk home injected into my veins
i've been listening to her stuff for a few years and have found it very real and raw. i didn't interact with the fandom but the reverence and "SHE CREATED EVERYTHING" some people have for her is so odd to me. she's a human, we don't know her, we know her music. and it's beautiful. but you have to draw a line.
This 🙏
I've been a fan of Mitski for a while, and for a long time, I just listening to her music on Spotify and that was that. Only recently I switched to UA-cam music, and in doing so, I began to see comments about her/ what her community perception is. I was surprised to see people saw her as private! Her songs--while not necessarily literally about her--are very intimate, vulnerable, and personal.
I have a hunch (no actual research and not too much thought--hence hunch) that artists labelled as "private" are those that attempt to avoid interacting with their fans directly. For example, some artists might do Q/A's, respond to comments, and embrace fan jokes. Not doing so is "being private." But to me, it's not about privacy, it's about what you prioritize pursuing, and maintaining mental health.
"Prioritizing pursuing and maintaining mental health" 💖💖💖 wise wise words, I could not agree more
I agree. A lot people think and artist is ''private'' because they don't interact or post a lot about themselves on social media, like posting casual pictures, doing live streams, etc. But fans can honestly become demanding and invasive. I used to follow mitski on facebook around the time bury me at makeout creek was released, and she shared a lot of more personal moments, like little videos and stuff like that. As she gained a bigger following she didn't really post as herself anymore, and it became more of an official channel to promote music and tours, I think it was a good way to establish boundaries. I personally like to know that the artists I follow can have a personal life in peace, and I don't really want to know about it, because they sharing their music is enough.
exactly, the way fan culture is now musicians are expected to sell not just their music but their body, their personality, their identity. its honestly sickening to me.
My body is made of crushed little stars has such a innate symbolism for me. I have lived through an abusive situation that made me a broken, suicidal, depressed person, and I believe the only thing that kept me alive is work. I wanted to leave, I wanted to be happy and successful, I wanted love but I couldn’t find it, and being a workaholic obsessive hopeful mess at least gave me goals. Mundanity was the only thing that allowed me to be grounded, the only thing I could do to survive. I love the way this song basks in the mundane, seeing it as absurd, but powerful.
This!
I never saw such a perfect green screen
we are SERIOUS about the CINEMATOGRAPHY at Kate industries
A lovely look into an often overlooked aspect of music. The best guitarist I know is an accountant. Sometimes it’s enough to be boring by day and adventurous by night.
1000% 🫶
Mitski is a real artist. She's so delightfully weird, I love her soooo much 🥰 truly underrated.
i've been a fan of mitski since before her commercial or critical acclaim. in high school i would listen to every single one of her albums on loop every day because her music truly expressed the depression and heartbreak i was going through. the yearning she expresses in her music is unlike no other artist.
her relationship with her fans is so interesting, because she loves them so much but she also hates being so publicly perceived. the constant push and pull between her love of music and her desire to be alone and at peace. i feel very happy for her that she's been able to find that balance, and i genuinely have thought she was going to quit music at least three times during the time i've been following her career, especially after hearing I Guess. i am so grateful she isn't quitting, and i hope the people who have found her through tiktok and social media will continue to help her feel comfortable with sharing such deep parts of herself.
and if I had the money to pay mitski to carol in my home... god! her christmas carols on youtube are gorgeously haunting
This is such a beautiful thing to hear. She is wonderful!
I love her Christmas carols too!
I’m so interested by how the music industry reflects the greater economy. There are a very small number of people taking most of the attention and money, while the vast majority are struggling to garner any attention or cover basic costs.
THIS! True for all creative industries, for the most part
The excerpt you read out loud at 13:46 kind of blew my mind. This recurring idea is spewed a lot surrounding the legacies behind music artists, that "a good, interesting music artist is a tortured music artist", and I had always thought that it was a coincidence, that tortured music artists aren't good just because of what they go through. but hearing a similar message coming from someone whose music I listen to really tears down the fourth wall for me. I just thought that all of those people spewing this sentiment were just speculating about the creative process and success behind these handful of artists who just to happen to struggle in one way or another, but to hear from a real source that sometimes they chase those situations that compromise their well-being just for "the song" feels so transparent that it's off-putting.
I wonder who first spread this idea that artists must struggle, and how it became so pervasive that actual artists began pursuing their own suffering because they believed in it so much, that it would enrich their perspective for a song or two. from the sound of it, it doesn't feel like the music industry cares about artists all that much if that's the kind of environment that's being fostered in those spaces. I admire mitski so much, and it concerns but also saddens me that a young mitski ever believed she had to inflict any kind of emotional pain upon herself in order to appear interesting in her music and to her fans. I respect her music so deeply, I view her body of work as almost a home of all her past emotions and experiences immortalized. that's also just why I appreciate any form of art in general, it gives you a chance to take a feeling, maybe even a feeling that seems so invisible that it doesn't feel like your suffering even holds a place in reality, and put it somewhere where you can prove that it's real and see it for yourself. it gives you permission to expand upon it, elaborate it on it, and then move on from it. sometimes it feels like such a disservice to move on from a stage of your life without properly addressing it with yourself, like an "all of that pain and I can't talk about it" kind of feeling. even when you legitimately don't identify with it anymore, you think about who you were when you were immersed in all of it, and you want to validate yourself with a tribute to who you were and what you saw, even if it's a version that doesn't exist quite the same way.
mitski's discography feels exactly like that. it's like a house for all of her past grievances that have their own place, that deserve recognition even if she can't remember how that time in her life felt like anymore, and I just find that so very rich and remarkable. I remember in one interview, she talked about how she would build up on certain emotions that were usually triggered from something rather mundane by setting a fictional scene or using characters to convey those emotions in a presentable way for her music. she used Me and My Husband as an example of this, how she used the archetype of a lonely housewife to expand upon a certain feeling she associates with or imposes on that character referenced from a less fashionable situation and real person who was there to feel it. when she had said that in her interview, she just reassured her own brilliance in my mind, and I found great solace in that statement. even if an emotion or experience looks trivial, it's still worth the art and the act of dressing-up. I love the idea of immortalizing periods in your life within art because it pays tribute to yourself and what you've endured, big or small, loud or incredibly quiet.
I'm bringing all of this up, and I'm finally wrapping up my comment thank god, to look back on her music and think about how some of those emotions could have been sought after for the purpose of the art itself, and how it alarms me. I wonder what songs she was referring to when she said this, and if they were even released. still, I think that even if some of that pain was pursued rather than an organic experience, it captures a certain headspace in her life where she believed that was required of her to be a good artist. it still unintentionally captures a separate kind of unique, sidestepped pain, even if that wasn't the focal point of the product to begin with. whether that pain was felt in the moment or something to be gained for a product, it still captures a picture, doesn't it? I have a lot of admiration for mitski and her candor, and I hope she knows that it's not the suffering in her songs that makes her interesting, it's what she makes of it and how she transforms it into something that is undeniably hers, that cannot be replicated by anyone else because they don't share her mind or her hands. I still have not found any music quite like mitski's. I hope she continues to immortalize visceral images and stories from her life, and also that she now knows that a lot of us would rather she be boring and happy than "interesting" but in a hole, but we all know her talent is undeniable. it can never be retracted by a change in tune, that is hers to own. I know she particularly grappled with that dilemma while producing her past album, how she wanted to produce more uplifting melodies without jeopardizing the respect and mutual understanding she's gained from her listeners who still wanted more somber tracks. I think this next upcoming album will finally reject this sentiment and be a tangible process of healing, one that perhaps a young mitski needed to hear in order to learn what she knows now.
this does make me wonder about how many artists from the past and present believed in this toxic idea, though. how many iconic artists led with this mantra that they must suffer to succeed? I wonder how many of these artists that we regarded as "tortured, but talented" were also in on it, too. it really does speak to the fact that you can be lost and fragmented, as long as it's consumable. i can only hope more artists stop lusting after their own self-degradation for a product as we all grow wiser.
edit: shit ton of grammatical errors lmao
This comment is absolutely gorgeous I feel like I just read a whole essay. A lot of the stuff you said reminded me of her song geyser as a think that song was written about this subject. The lyric ‘feel the harmony only when it’s harming me’ comes to mind, and I love how the rest of the song talks about loving music as an art form and expression as mitski has said herself before. Separating it from using pain and suffering to create rather than creating for her own joy. She is truly an incredible artist.
@@First_love_late_spring I'm so glad you brought up Geyser and I can't believe I forgot about when she said that. songs like Geyser, among many others like Carry Me Out, Last Words of a Shooting Star, Pink in the Night, and now Star, are all individual reasons as to why her music is so special. if mitski didn't put the pen to the paper and record those distinct, visceral feelings she was treading, we would have never learned about them. I just find that practice invaluable and worth the time it takes to make that music. I'm glad that mitski cares as deeply about it as her fans do, but I hope she can find a way to do it that won't feel like what she describes in Geyser. and I'm thankful that she's willing to share those moments with us in her music. this is the kind of music that makes you a legacy.
@@mooncake386 I don't know what to say other than it is so refreshing to see someone so passionate about an artist's work and their experience facing consumption while trying to retain their core authenticity. Thank you for sharing your thoughts, will continue to ponder them throughout the day 🫶
@@KateBrunotts thanks so much! it took a long time writing all of that but your video really got me thinking and made me want to share a lot of things I had always thought about mitski and the act of art in general. after your video I realized that a person can be open in more ways than one, even if they're not spouting every thought to the online world for their fans to consume.
This is hands down the best comment I have read in UA-cam about anything, you are marvelous with words! I truly love Mitski but you had made me fall in love with her art even more! Thanks for sharing your vision!
I feel like people tend to forget that artists are human too. This "fame" makes it seem like they're a different entity, when really they're just unique humans(cuz everyone is unique) with the same kinds of worries or struggles others may have. Mitski saying that people would be disappointed to meet her is actually so sad, the expectations artists have to bear are insane. People need to realize that at the end, artists are humans too. I appreciate Mistki whether its for her music or for her overall actual personality, all she's being is human, and that's quite normal id say. My point is, that no one should even have the right to be "disappointed" on knowing or meeting her, because she's human like every other person out there!!!! ☺💖
THIS! ❤️
@10:48 - Having a solid day job has made being a musician SO MUCH more enjoyable for me. I'm able to worry about the art and not worry about how much I'm gonna make from a show.
Love this 💖
I'm on the fence with this... of course I want my listeners to connect with me as a person, and for other artists to know it's totally normal to have a job (or jobs) to fund your art. but when interviewers ask me what my "dailly routine" looks like or if I have a job outside of music... I still don't feel comfortable answering. because I don't want anyone to show up at my job (or for my coworkers to find out I make music). what's ironic is, one of my coworkers is actively a musician in a well-known local band. out of respect for his privacy I don't ask any questions about the music, I actually hadn't heard of his band til he mentioned it in passing, but I just want to respect the boundary between artists in the art world vs artists in the real world... idk if this makes sense. but I'm kinda just treating him how I'd want people to treat me.
also, the nature of my job is confidential anyway, I wouldn't be able to talk about it in detail even if I wanted to. and now I feel like Hannah Montana, keeping secrets in both worlds.
This so valid! Sometimes we aren't at liberty or the confines of corporate/art world create too much of a gap. It's also a weird thing when you realize there's utility in sharing yourself when it comes to finding a home for your music... it can be difficult to draw proper boundaries! Love that you're building an environment that works for you
wow its weird i love in an age where even the obscure artists I'm unsure ppl know about even have videos of so much footage about them. I loved every second of this and realize Mitski is actually kinda far from obscure even though nobody else in my circles listen to her. :/
The internet can be cool sometimes. I head you though, didn't have a lot of people who shared the same music taste as myself growing up, happy to have communities like these in the meantime
The conclusion was very comforting as a fellow musician/creative. I’m not (yet) a fan of Mitski but you might have converted me.
She does have, I think, more boundaries than the average celebrity. They’re more than reasonable but I think people are unaccustomed with singers being like that. And it’s something I appreciate, because honestly I think she’s right if I met her I would probably be disappointed. That’s not saying she’s a bad person irl or anything like that, just that my vision of her in my mind is probably not super accurate, and frankly it does not have to be accurate to be an amazing artistic influence in my life.
Having a full time day job and being a professional artist in honestly something I think is mostly reserved for type-A neurotypicals, in the long run. I know people with neurodivergences who do or did it, and usually they either transition to being full time creatives who have to deal with artistic constraints and deadlines - or they flame out, hard.
Great point!
This video was executed perfectly. A viewpoint that many people don’t try to understand about Mitski 💗
You're so kind, thank you!
absolutely love this vid but!!!!!! your title says miski and i cant move past it😭
lmaooo thank you I can't read
i saw mitski in 2015 when she opened for elvis depressedly and she is realest person i’ve ever met.
omg you actually met her?❤
@@darksharkk yes! I don’t have any photos I don’t think I even took one but she was at the merch table when I bought bury me at make out creek! It was a very small show
@@tinydancer19971 REALLY? THATS SO COOL!!💞🎀
This is so relatable as someone in the fashion industry (or trying to be lol) I have fully accepted that I cant really be an artsy fashion designer and make a living, I will try to get a technical job in the fashion industry at some big shitty fashion brand and then be creative when I get home from work lol.
YES! I just read the NYT piece on Elena Valez and wow. Fashion is such a challenging space.
I love this perspective. We’re so used to people, especially people with an audience, being “on” all the time, that Mitski’s relaxed approched to self-promotion and branding seems lacking, when it’s more than people were expected to do ten, fifteen years ago. We should resist the multiples of labor (unpaid labor in fact!) that are getting attached to creative jobs in general.
mitski has been my special interest for almost 3 years now! i’m so glad she is getting the love she deserved
She's amazing!
the working artist part is SO relatable even though i'm still a student, the struggle is REAL
💖 I hear you 😭 Hang in there!
a really interesting video! i'm graduating high school this year and art has always been a really big part of my life, and i'm thinking of basically giving it up seriously. i originally did it for financial purposes but the more i read into things and the more i listened to this video i agree that there's also a lot of freedom when you don't make creativity your full time job. your voice is so nice to listen to and i was able to finish my sister's bday card while learning a lot more, great video again!!
Ah this is so nice to hear! Congratulations on graduating and YES I think with any path comes sacrifices. Thank you so much :,) Really appreciate that
I like your message, it’s something I tell my friends. I love to paint & make music but I don’t wanna be a struggling artist. I rather work my day job & create when I have time , bc at the end of the day it is my hobby , something that makes me happy, whenever it does start to make me more money…then I’ll drop the day job . Until then I’ll do both frl
Mitski's music is like noone else's. I found it around 15yo and have become a big fan since appreciating her music more and more as i'm getting older. She saved me 🙏 i love her personality and how rawly human she is in the interwievs.
She's amazing! And yes, takes so much courage to share as honestly as she does
this is so important for so many of her fans to hear! she speaks so openly about what her music means and her opinions on the industry and people just gloss over it to project their own views onto it as fact
im so glad someones finally bringing up all the interviews! ive watched so many and a lot of her live shows. ive dug deep just to see her in all aspects of music. its freedom.
It would be fine if mitski quits honestly, her songs will still be streamed for years to come, then she could sit back in the ordinary life again. Theres so many criticism on her fans putting her on a pedestal lately, i mostly think of them as jokes when i see them.. am i understanding right that this is part of the problem? if not, then i dont get all this at all. I enjoyed the quotes on this video though :)
I’m a 15 year old and 3 years ago I got into Mitskis music and went to her concert and now I am absolutely in love with her work but she’s so misunderstood and her songs are always categorized wrong and stereotyped by different apps
ugh i love mitski! her music is great, her personality is great, she’s authentic, too. i relate to her a lot
She's incredible
I really enjoyed this realistic and yet optimistic outlook on what being an artist (for me illustrator) looks like for the majority of people. This somehow gave me a little hope for my future and that things will be okay, even with struggle.
This is such a lovely thing to hear ❤️ Proud of you for sharing your art 🙏
as someone who's probably going to have a desk job at an arts organization/non profit in the future to give myself enough money to fund my music/films, i really appreciate you including that in your video. i think i fall into the rare category of artists who would get insanely burnt out if i did art full time. i'm currently going to school for music and film and i've noticed stigma with not wanting to describe the job you have outside of art started almost immediately in freshman year. the music industry specifically has soooo much stigma surrounding needing to have a day job, i hope one day we're eventually able to talk/joke about the jobs we have outside of music as openly as actors. this was such a good video on mitski!! i've been such a big fan of her's since i saw her in 2019, i really enjoyed getting to hear your thoughts on her art and how they relate to you
It's odd how quickly other artist denounce those who derive their income from other places, and I AGREE! Haha I am always doing the most random jobs to keep the lights on. Thank you for taking the time to watch, really appreciate this thoughtful comment 💖
as an artist i loved this video!! please keep making videos amplifying the artists actual voices- they so often get lost in the excitement of the music
I decided to just dive headlong into singing/songwriting. I used to have a part-time job at a Panera years ago, but the pandemic and getting laid off gave me a good excuse to pursue music fulltime. I busk and record my sessions almost every day that I can, and it seems like I'm BARELY able to make ends meet. People have recommended that I secure a part-time job, but the truth is, I already spend about 8 hours every day performing/reviewing/editing and more hours practicing/writing/composing, then I need to set aside time to cook myself meals, go shopping, unwind.
The truth is, I am nowhere near as experienced in the industry as Mitski is, but I think another truth is that everyone will go through different experiences in their music journey. Mitski describes freedom to be a double-edged sword, but to me, it is the ultimate validation that I have personal value and there's nothing more valuable in the world than the idea that you "think" you matter. Even though I am skipping meals or waiving insurance, if I were to choose between music or a decent living, I'd pick music in a heartbeat.
I think one of the biggest problem with this industry is that the nature of it being consumerist means that musicians (esp those who are starting off) undervalue themselves. It has reached such a plateau that professional-level musicians are afraid to ask for $20 dollars for an hour-long live show, which perpetuates this stigma among non-musicians that music isn't the sum of thousands of hours of work.
I want to believe things will get better if we just wait a few decades (if we introduce universal basic income, if there are more proactive programs to financially assist artists, better rates for streaming services, etc.), but right now, the best we can do is grind it out and hope that we can forward a better culture around the arts.
This is a great take! Currently, I'm just doing music on the side and seeing where that goes. I'm a content writer by day, and I'm so grateful that I get to be creative in my day job. All the love and respect for Mitski. I hope she finds happiness 🔮❤️
That is so great, I'm actually in a very similar boat haha content writer day job for the win. I wholeheartedly agree 💖
while this is a very sweet video and it's nice to hear your perspective.... generally... all people mean when they say mitski is "private" is that she used to have a lot of social media that she would post casually on, making goofy jokes and whatnot, but then she got popular, took a hiatus, and came back and her social media is all more professional now. not a huge deal, and totally fine, she's just not shitposting about Spiderman on Tumblr anymore.
13:58 honestly this is why I've always related to Mitski. I've done similar things before when she talked about relationships and sort of doing it for the art and the plot sort of? I've done the same thing out of wanting to make something beautiful out of that pain and wanting to finally hurt enough to feel valid? She's so human and she's the only artist I've been able to relate to this much
She's incredible! Totally can relate
SHE. PLAYED. RIBS.
I fell in love with Mitski through the Melodrama tour, too :D And I rarely go to shows, so it was such a lucky coincidence!
Thanks for the insight into working artist life and for sharing those quotes. I feel informed & appreciative of you & Mitski both
Of course ah! So nice to meet another Lorde and Mitski fan 💖
Just found your channel and I feel like I've found a kindred spirit. I've actually done an analysis of an artist named Hwasa who I love for the same reasons you love Mitski, especially because she's a KPOP artist and that industry is (possibly) the most image driven and inauthentic. Sincerity and REAL authenticity has really gone out of style in music so when I find an artist who is holding onto those qualities my respect for them is immense. Thank you for this video. Loving music and not chasing a lifestyle is important because creating true art actually makes a difference in the world (at least I think so). Keep doing what you're doing 🫡
That is so incredible, and it's so refreshing to hear that across several genres, thank YOU for such a thoughtful comment 💖
Yeah she does say a lot
this is the exact video i needed to see right now. thank you so much
you are so welcome! thanks for watching 💖
Also. As a big Mitski fan who has talked to a lot of Mitski fans, the younger you are, the more they try to idealize Mitski. Older Mitski fans have gone past that. (By old/young I mean how long they’ve been fans in relation to their age.)
i love the way you explain your thoughts!
Thank you so much for listening :,) That is so kind!
Never heard of Mitski but for some reason I watched this whole video.
So many great thoughts 😊💝
such a good video, thank you for sharing :]
my body's made of crushed little stars is one of my favorite mitski songs too, its so underrated! also, great video
On repeat always 💖 Thank you so much :)
you opened my eyes on something very very important for me
❤️
Not too depressing 😌 great perspective! From one musician to another, this was what I needed to hear today.
my first time watching your channel, and I just want to say that you look and sound like a gracious princess from some old movie or something! idk your whole presence and aura is really warm and soothing. I don't even listen to mitski or know anything about her, I literally pressed on this vid by accident, but I'm hooked now and I'm having a great time. I guess it's time to listen to mitski now 😅
aw omg you are the sweetest thank you wow :,)
Loving your vibe, thanks for this! 👏🏻 Hadn't heard of Mitski, am checking her out now, nice.
She's incredible! Thank you so much for listening!
Thank you for sharing your thoughts, so interesting
of course! Thanks for watching
this was super interesting! thank u for condensing ur insights for the the rest of us who don't read as many interviews :)
Absolutely thanks for watching 💖
idk who mistki is and this is the first video I'm seeing from you but hi!
the power of the algorithm
She is a LEGEND and hi :)!
this is a great video, i don't know much about mitski's music but this applies to my favorite artist and it was great to see the perspective of a musician :)
Ah thank you so much for watching :) That is great to hear!
This was a really lovely and chill video to watch, and hearing your perspective was refreshing, thank you!
Aw that is so kind, thank YOU for giving it a chance 💖
I love this video
💖💖💖
absolutely loved listening to you speak about mitski
i love this video so much
❤️
this video felt like such a safe space
❤️
💫
She kinda sounded like Lana del Rey talking about music in the first interview
This is great, thanks
💖 Thank you for listening!
Happy to find your page, great content and perspective! Subbed :)
Ah thank you so much means a lot :,)
I love these kinds of videos :) very nice
I’ll do my best to make some more, thank you so much for watching❤
heres my question, how do i hold a day job as a person in the industry? im expected to tour but to tour is to leave for months on end. how the fuck do i keep a job doing that
That's a great point. No idea lol haven't made it that far on my own, but I'd imagine even if you can work remotely it's nearly impossible just by the sheer amount of energy playing multiple back to back shows and traveling takes
How dare her act like a normal human being. All celebrities must be romanticized versions of us 🤬🤬
Thank u so much for this vídeo ❤️
Of course!! 💖 Thanks for giving it a try
fantastic video thanks for sharing
:,) Thank you so much for watching 💖
real
Very well said! I appreciate the insight greatly
:) Thank you so much! 💖
please please please anyone who is seeing this comment go read Mitski's 27 bad survival tips. It's old, but I think It's the closest she has ever gotten to us. It made me think a lot about her but also about my own life.
this was such a great recommendation thank you!
Ok. Listen to TLIIASAW
Lana working at the waffle house 💕 queen