Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Global Rank

Current

Top Releases

View All

MY WOMAN

128.9M streams

128,916,895

Burn Your Fire For No Witness (Deluxe ...

93M streams

92,996,103

Song of the Lark and Other Far Memorie...

86.3M streams

86,307,659

Strange Cacti

35.7M streams

35,696,191

Phases

33M streams

32,979,581

Big Time

28.4M streams

28,385,878

Half Way Home

22.7M streams

22,728,316

Like I Used To

16.7M streams

16,677,774

Sleepwalker

8.8M streams

8,783,044

Aisles

6.7M streams

6,660,644

Biography

Fresh grief, like fresh love, has a way of sharpening our vision and bringing on painful clarifications. No matter how temporary these states may be the vulnerability and transformation they demand can overpower the strongest among us. Then there are the rare, fertile moments when both occur, when mourning and limerence heighten, complicate and explain each other; the songs that comprise Angel Olsen’s Big Time were forged in such whiplash. Big Time is an album about the expansive power of new love, but this brightness is tempered by a profound sense of loss. During Olsen’s process of coming to terms with her queerness and confronting the traumas that had been keeping her from fully accepting herself, she felt it was time to come out to her parents, a hurdle she’d avoided for some time. “Finally at the ripe age of 34, I was free to be me,” she said. Three days later her father died and shortly after her mother passed away. The shards of this grief are scattered throughout the album. Three weeks after her mother’s funeral she was in the studio recording this wise and tender new album. Loss has long been a subject of Olsen’s elegiac songs, but few can write elegies with quite the reckless energy as she. If that bursting-at-the-seams energy has come to seem intractable to her work, this album proves Olsen is now writing from a more rooted place of clarity. These are songs not just about transformational mourning, but of finding freedom and joy in the privations as they come.