A defining characteristic of
Natalie Merchant's career after leaving
10,000 Maniacs in 1993 is her deliberateness as a songwriter; the songs do come, but not quickly.
Keep Your Courage is
Merchant's first collection of original songs in nine years. She didn't stay quiet during that decade -- she revisited her 1995 solo debut
Tigerlily upon its 20th anniversary -- but she also spent a period of time in the early 2020s recovering from a spinal surgery that required a long healing process.
Keep Your Courage documents her re-emergence after this convalescence, a record that doesn't dwell in the darkness but rather celebrates compassion, empathy, and inspiration.
Merchant may have gone through an extended period of introspection, yet she chooses to look outward, even inviting
Abena Koomson-Davis of the
Resistance Revival Choir to duet on "Big Girls" and "Come On, Aphrodite," the pair of songs that open the album. These two tracks suggest a bit of a brighter record than what
Keep Your Courage actually is. Most of the album is stately and sober, careful and cautious compositions that touch upon myths and legends as a way to address personal and political issues.
Merchant's inherently warm, empathetic voice keeps the album from seeming still in its quiet moments, of which there are many; most of the record either simmers slowly or requires concentration to narrow in on its core emotions. Perhaps the album could use a few more cuts like "Tower of Babel," whose spruced-up New Orleans swing is a clear outlier here, but there's something softly compelling and endearing about
Merchant's dedication to kindness, not to mention her penchant for literature and history. Where her peers have scaled down their ambitions, she's reaching for grand ideas and emotions on
Keep Your Courage, turning her personal journey into something universal. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine