Eden has traditionally been portrayed as a magical garden with a gal, a guy, a snake, and an apple ruining all life for eternity for everyone. But what if it was actually a rural farm on the border of England and Wales, with sheep and hens and teenagers getting rat-drunk on Baileys, listening to Kanye on a hill, and singing a song called “Dubstep in My Trousers,” and it’s so good and breezy that you can stay all week—so good that you never look at your primitive Nokia—and breakfast is always sweet but morning never actually comes?
This is paradise as Joscelin Dent-Pooley conjures it on his second album as Jerskin Fendrix, more or less as he experienced it growing up in remote Shropshire in the late 2000s. Never mind his life today as an Oscar-nominated composer who scored Yorgos Lanthimos’ last three films and got Emma Stone to star in one of his latest videos; he still sings about these Elysian scenes of bumpkin teen life with such earnest reverence, in a cavernous voice perhaps more naturally suited to playing Hades on Broadway, that you can hardly imagine anything better. His pristinely vivid world becomes as poignant as your own memories, whether you were a city kid or you have (as we once did out in the sticks) at some stage raised a temporary barn to party in. But this pretty side of the record—the cuckoo clock vocal chirrups and chamber elegance of opener “Beth’s Farm” keeping Fendrix’s lavish crooning buoyant—feels like a harbinger of the rot inside every shiny apple, even before he repeatedly sings “and nobody dies on Beth’s farm,” like singing it could make it real.
Fendrix wrote Once Upon a Time... in Shropshire after experiencing the suicide of a close childhood friend and the sudden, unexpected loss of his father. Death stalks his songs. Sometimes its presence is metaphysical, as if he’s certain in the belief of something beyond human comprehension: “Are you still alive somewhere in the universe?” he asks on the choirboy-tender plea “The Universe.” Other times, his beloved landscape becomes symbolic of lost loved ones: “The river rises,” he sings in a weary growl on “Last Night in Shropshire,” “and inch by inch we let you down.” Sometimes death is just death: “Fuck I’m buzzing, I’ve been drinking so much White Claw,” he sings with skulking malevolence on “King Lear.” “Who will call to say you died?”

