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Preacher's Daughter

Preacher's Daughter
Ethel Cain sitting in a white dress beneath a picture of Jesus Christ.
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 12, 2022 (2022-05-12)
Genre
Length75:42
LabelDaughters of Cain
Producer
  • Ethel Cain
  • Matthew Tomasi
Ethel Cain chronology
Inbred
(2021)
Preacher's Daughter
(2022)
Perverts
(2025)
Singles from Preacher's Daughter
  1. "Gibson Girl"
    Released: March 17, 2022
  2. "Strangers"
    Released: April 7, 2022
  3. "American Teenager"
    Released: April 21, 2022

Preacher's Daughter is the debut studio album by the American singer-songwriter and record producer Ethel Cain. It was released on May 12, 2022, through her independent record label Daughters of Cain. The album was entirely written and produced by Cain, with assistance from Steven Mark Colyer and Matthew Tomasi on certain tracks.

Preacher's Daughter is a concept album with a narrative that centers on fictional characters, exploring themes such as family trauma and sexual violence. It was inspired by the artist's personal life as the daughter of a deacon. Sonically, it experiments with Americana, dark ambient, and elements of several other genres. Cain was inspired by mainstream artists Florence Welch and Lana Del Rey for her vocal performance on the album. It incorporates predominant Southern Gothic imagery with religious and American aesthetics. Three singles—"Gibson Girl", "Strangers", and "American Teenager"—preceded Preacher's Daughter between March and April 2022, the latter accompanied by a music video. To promote the album, Cain embarked on her first two concert tours, the Freezer Bride Tour in 2022 and the Blood Stained Blonde Tour in 2023, through North America, Europe, and Oceania.

Upon its release, Preacher's Daughter was met with acclaim from music critics, with praise towards its storytelling and songwriting, and Cain's vocal performance. Many critics named it one of the best albums of the year, while Paste included it on a mid-decade ranking. A standout for reviewers, "American Teenager" was deemed by Billboard and Rolling Stone one of the best LGBTQ songs of all time. The album has also garnered Cain a cult following online. It is scheduled to be issued physically for the first time on April 4, 2025. Preacher's Daughter is the first part of a trilogy of albums, which Cain intends to portray through a series of novels and an accompanying film. A prequel to the album, titled Willoughby Tucker, I'll Always Love You, is scheduled to be released in August 2025.

Background and development

Hayden Silas Anhedönia developed an interest in music at a young age. She was involved in a church choir from a Southern Baptist community where her father was a deacon; it was her first exposure to music.[1] Influenced by a variety of Christian music, she began studying classical piano at age 8. She left the church at the age of 16.[2] Two years later, after leaving her religious family home in Florida, she began her gender transition process and started writing her debut studio album.[3]

In 2017, she released bedroom pop demos of songs under different monikers.[4] As White Silas, she first published Gregorian chant-inspired singles and mixtapes to SoundCloud and Tumblr.[5] Two years later, she began her main project, Ethel Cain, with the extended plays (EPs) Carpet Bed and Golden Age.[6] She then signed to the publishing company Prescription Songs, and created her own imprint Daughters of Cain.[2]

Cain's debut album had an initial duration of two hours and a half.[7] Before the idea of Preacher's Daughter, Cain was working on a different concept album "about angels and stuff"; she stated that she was under "LSD psychosis withdrawals" at the time.[8] She changed the course of the album when she found a piano sample that inspired her to write the song "A House in Nebraska" in one day.[8] Cain first opted for an album about "prairie women", inspired by her vision of a woman in a field that recalled her to Little House on the Prairie, and envisioned the album's protagonist as a cult leader.[8][9] "Strangers" was then written in 10 minutes, without the intention for it to become the album's final track.[10] She declared that "a week or two" after watching the 1991 film Thelma & Louise, she wrote "Thoroughfare" and the album "shifted into a new gear", and was inspired to see "where [the story] was truly going". She also listened to horror podcasts and spent time at country stores and estate sales while making the record.[11]

Cain gained prominence in 2021 by releasing her third EP under the moniker, Inbred.[12] The EP marked a departure from Cain's previous bedroom production and served as a teaser of how her full-length debut would sound.[13] Developed over four years, Cain wrote and produced all 13 tracks on Preacher's Daughter, with assistance from two collaborators: the multi-instrumentalist Matthew Tomasi and the musician Steven Mark Colyer.[3][14]

Concept and themes

Overview

Preacher's Daughter is a concept album inspired by Cain's own struggles with culture and religion, but centered on the fictional character of the same name, a girl who suffered abuse from her father and escapes from her Christian family and community.[15] The artist stated that the character is her alter ego, and described it as her "dark, evil twin".[3] The overall lyrical themes of the album include transgenerational trauma, toxic relationships, and cultist Christianity,[16] and some of the content is a criticism to the "American Dream".[14] The story of the album is set in the southern United States[1] in 1991, ten years after the death of the town's preacher, the main character's father.[7][17] Writing for Vox, Emily St. James found the album's characterization similar to Truman Capote's 1996 novel In Cold Blood and the works of Flannery O'Connor.[18]

Cain has stated that Preacher's Daughter was the first chapter of the story, with an intention to write a series of novels, as well as directing and starring in an accompanying film.[19] In an interview with The Line of Best Fit in December 2022, she also expressed interest in continuing a trilogy of albums, with the second and third titled Preacher’s Wife and Mother of a Preacher, respectively.[19] She dubbed the trilogy "the Ethel Cain Cinematic Universe".[20] A prequel to Preacher's Daughter, titled Willoughby Tucker, I'll Always Love You, is scheduled to be released in August 2025. Originally described as a companion EP, it eventually became Cain's second studio album.[21]

Songs

On the album's prologue, titled "Family Tree" and subtitled "(Intro)", Cain explores transgenerational trauma.[20] It begins with a distorted recording of a Southern preacher explaining the significance of the mother as an icon.[14] The intro is followed by "American Teenager", on which the artist is critical to the "American Dream",[22] expresses anti-war themes, and criticizes gun culture in the United States.[23] On the torch song "A House In Nebraska",[24] Cain relays the story of herself and a partner's lives, named Willoughby,[19] while missing them and their home base in Nebraska.[14] The same partner is portrayed as a crime-committing bad boy on "Western Nights",[15] which romanticizes their dark and abusive relationship and how she would do anything for them.[16][14] Beats Per Minute's Tom Williams drew comparisons between the lyrics of "Western Nights" and Lana Del Rey's Ultraviolence (2014).[15]

The lyrics of the fourth track, "Family Tree", are about her relationship with Christianity and a complicated family network marked by violence.[25][14] On "Hard Times", Cain longs for the love of a distant father who perpetuated sexual abuse to her, and pleads him, "Tell me a story about how it ends, where you're still the good guy. I'll make pretend".[22][18] She also reflects about wanting to "emulate the fatherly authorities in her life who brought her harm", according to Devon Chodzin from Paste.[14] The seventh track, "Thoroughfare", finds Cain meeting a man in Texas, who tells her not to escape from his truck. The protagonist "hop[s] right in" as they go towards the west of the United States, while she affirms: "'Cause for the first time since I was a child/I could see a man who wasn't angry."[17] "Gibson Girl" is a violent song told from the perspective of a prostitute.[20] On the track, she narrates a situation of abuse from her new partner,[26] detailing how sexuality on the album often directly proximate to violence and death.[14]

On "Ptolemaea", Cain goes through hallucinations induced by drugs. While a distorsioned male voice says "gave you, need you, love you", the character begs to "stop".[15] It was influenced by the artist's love for horror movies.[16] The song was named after one of four concentric rings of the ninth circle of Hell in Dante's Inferno, dedicated to those who betrayed their guests.[3] "Ptolemaea" is followed by two instrumental tracks—"August Underground" and "Televangelism". The former represents Cain trying to escape from her lover, who ultimately kills her, and the latter allegorises her ascent to Heaven.[15] "Sun Bleached Flies", the penultimate song on Preacher's Daughter, finds the character reflecting from beyond the grave; she later recalls the third track: "I'm still praying for that house in Nebraska."[15] She looks back lamenting her detachment from faith and her community.[14] The final track on the album, "Strangers", starts with another monologue from the preacher, who talks about the paradise awaiting believers after death.[14] The track sees Cain as a "freezer bride" in her killer's basement, who cannibalizes her.[15] She tries to have validation from her lover and religion, and then focuses on her mother in the final verse of the song and album: "Mama, just know that I love you / And I'll see you when you get here".[15]

Music and style

Florence Welch singing into a microphone
Lana Del Rey singing into a microphone
Cain cited Florence Welch and Lana Del Rey as mainstream inspirations for her vocal performance.

Preacher's Daughter was described variously by critics as an Americana[9] and dark ambient[14] album with perceived influences from slowcore, heartland rock, gospel,[14] industrial, noise, and horror-electronica.[25] The album's sound is built around piano, grunge guitars, and "muddy sounds".[16] Several of its tracks are power ballads,[24] while the majority of them introduce guitar solos,[14] mainly inspired by stadium rock and hair rock.[22][27] The album contains cock rock riffs, sludge and drone instrumentals, and draws inspiration from Gregorian chants and choral vocals.[24] Cain cited mainstream artists Florence Welch and Lana Del Rey as vocal inspirations.[13] Many music critics observed similarities between Preacher's Daughter and the music of Del Rey,[a] while Shaad D'Souza for The Guardian also added Grouper to the comparisons.[29]

The dark and heavy production of "Family Tree (Intro)" contrasts with the energetic first half of the album.[15] The most upbeat track on the album, "American Teenager", is led by synthesizers and guitars.[14] Self-described by Cain as a "fake pop song",[30] reviewers compared its sound to the works of several musicians, including Khalid,[20] Taylor Swift,[9] and Bruce Springsteen.[14] "A House in Nebraska" is built over piano chords and includes a maximalist crescendo with electric guitars and drums, which Caitlin White of Uproxx believed it was close to shoegaze.[20] Cain then explores with pop rock on "Western Nights".[15] Less pop elements are present on the album as it progresses.[25] The tracks "Family Tree" and "Gibson Girl" incorporate distorted white noise and piano;[31] Meaghan Garvey from NPR described the latter as "hate-f*** R&B" and compared its production to a "strip club death march".[7] "Thoroughfare" is led by harmonica and acoustic guitar,[20] and is structured as an epic.[14] The longest song on the album,[20] it is one of the tracks that lean more towards a "rootiest" sound along with "Hard Times", according to Rytlewski. The critic compared Cain's clear vocal performance on these songs to the style of Natalie Merchant.[9] With buzzing flies as its background,[7][32] "Ptolemaea" draws from industrial,[9] metal, and "harder rock", according to White.[20] The instrumental track "Televangelism" features echoed piano, which according to Chodzin, recalls Grouper's Grid of Points (2018).[14] The closer tracks on Preacher's Daughter, "Sun Bleached Flies" and "Strangers", add elements of country and rock.[33][31]

Artwork and aesthetics

Preacher's Daughter has predominant Southern Gothic imagery.[34] Cain's on-stage performances for the album were inspired by Edwardian fashion and Americana style.[35] The cover artwork of the album depicts Cain sitting below a painting of Jesus Christ, wearing a vintage white dress and heels.[15] In an interview with Nylon, Cain stated that she wanted the cover to be "a little creepy, like an eerie photograph found under your grandmother's bed of a relative she never told you about".[36] She also revealed that it took "about 8 selects", but chose the one where "[her] face was morphed slightly".[36] Promotional visuals for tracks from the album feature grainy shots of empty cabins and churches with American flags, with lights turned on, ceiling fans running,[15] and crucifixes on wood-panelled walls.[24]

Promotion and release

Cain singing into a microphone wearing an American flag-themed shirt and jean shorts
Cain performing at Gunnersbury Park for her concert tour Blood Stained Blonde Tour (2023)

Cain announced that her debut album would be titled Preacher's Daughter on March 17, 2022, and revealed its release date.[37] Alongside the album's announcement, Cain shared its track listing via social media.[38] She also released the lead single of the album, "Gibson Girl".[39] The following month, "Strangers" and "American Teenager" were released as the second and third single respectively; the latter gained an accompanying video in July.[40][41] Preacher's Daughter was self-released on May 12, 2022, through Daughters of Cain.[42] It has since gained a cult following online.[43][44] The album was initially slated to be issued physically for the first time on January 17, 2025, through a vinyl LP format;[45] the release was then delayed and is scheduled for April 4.[46][47]

To promote the album, Cain hosted album release shows in Los Angeles and New York City, on May 18 and May 25, 2022, respectively.[48] She also performed live on KEXP,[49] and at WNXP's Sonic Cathedral in Nashville, Tennessee.[50] As part of Vevo's "DSCVR Artists to Watch 2023" series, the singer recorded live performances for "A House in Nebraska" and "Thoroughfare".[51][52]

In June 2022, Cain confirmed via social media that she would be embarking on her first concert tour across the United States, titled the Freezer Bride Tour.[53] Weeks later, she announced several dates across Europe, in the United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands, and France.[53] She also embarked on the Blood Stained Blonde Tour in 2023,[54] which marked her Coachella Festival debut.[55] Cain performed at other festivals such as Pitchfork Music Festival,[56] Vivid Sydney,[57] and Reading and Leeds Festivals,[58] and served as a supporting act for Florence and the Machine's Dance Fever Tour,[59] Caroline Polachek's Spiraling Tour,[60] and Boygenius's The Tour.[61]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?8.2/10[62]
Metacritic82/100[63]
Review scores
SourceRating
Beats Per Minute[15]
Clash9/10[64]
Crack9/10[24]
DIY[13]
The Guardian[25]
The Line of Best Fit9/10[31]
Paste[14]
Pitchfork6.4/10[9]
Sputnikmusic[65]

Music publications reported that Preacher's Daughter received critical acclaim upon its release.[b] The album holds a score of 82 out of 100 based on eight reviews from the media aggregate site Metacritic, indicating "universal acclaim".[63] The review aggregator site AnyDecentMusic? gave the album a score of 8.2 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus from 12 reviews.[62]

Several critics praised Cain's vocal performance on the album.[24][31] Writing for Clash, Oshen Douglas McCormick described it as "prodigious" and said that it demands an emotional reception from the listener.[64] Garland and Chodzin opined that it is broad in range, while the former also commended her songwriting.[14][24] The Guardian's Rachel Aroesti also praised the album for its lyrical content and "atmospheric potency".[25] Sputnikmusic's Jesper L. admired the storytelling and arrangements, and described the album as "an astonishing accomplishment".[65] Similarly, Williams believed that the sound of Preacher's Daughter is as "heavy and unsettling" as its lyrical content and aesthetics.[15]

McCormick wrote that Cain's musical journey reached "a new height" with Preacher's Daughter, and described it as "a truly realised culmination of style and composition".[64] Paul Bridgewater from The Line of Best Fit praised the album's as cohesive and compared it positively to other debut projects, later expressing an excitement for Cain's subsequent career.[31]

Less favorably, Pitchfork writer Evan Rytlewski noted a disconnect between the singer's "provocative public image and the rigid composure of [the] songs". He also criticized the album's length, believing that at times "she sounds like she's writing to run out the clock".[9] Aroesti similarly thought that "by the end it's impossible to ignore the fact that this is a long record with flagging momentum".[25]

Rankings

At the end of 2022, Preacher's Daughter was included on several publications' lists of the best albums of the year, being named the best by Crack,[70] The Line of Best Fit,[71] and Sputnikmusic.[72] A standout according to critics, the track "American Teenager" was placed between the best LGBTQ songs of all time by Billboard and Rolling Stone,[73][74] and was ranked at number 29 on Pitchfork's list of the best songs of the decade so far.[75] In 2024, Paste ranked Preacher's Daughter at number 43 on "The 100 Best Albums of the 2020s So Far".[76]

Select year-end rankings for Preacher's Daughter
Publication List Rank Ref.
Billboard Best Albums of 2022
46
[77]
Clash Clash Albums Of The Year 2022
4
[78]
Crack Best Albums of 2022
1
[70]
Dazed The 20 Best Albums of 2022
2
[79]
The Guardian The 50 Best Albums of 2022
23
[80]
The Line of Best Fit The Best Albums of 2022 Ranked
1
[71]
Paste The Best Albums of 2022
12
[81]
The Ringer The 33 Best Albums of 2022
11
[82]
Slant Magazine The 50 Best Albums of 2022
20
[83]
Sputnikmusic Staff's Top 50 Albums of 2022: 10 – 1
1
[72]
Select mid-decade rankings for Preacher's Daughter
Publication List Rank Ref.
Paste The 100 Best Albums of the 2020s So Far
43
[76]

Track listing

All tracks written and produced by Ethel Cain, except where noted.

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Family Tree" (Intro)  3:41
2."American Teenager"
 4:18
3."A House in Nebraska"  7:46
4."Western Nights"  6:05
5."Family Tree"  7:11
6."Hard Times"  5:03
7."Thoroughfare"  9:28
8."Gibson Girl"  5:42
9."Ptolemaea"
  • Cain
  • Matthew Tomasi
  • Cain
  • Tomasi
6:24
10."August Underground"
  • Cain
  • Tomasi
  • Cain
  • Tomasi
3:40
11."Televangelism"  3:03
12."Sun Bleached Flies"  7:36
13."Strangers"  5:44
Total length:75:42

Release history

Release dates and formats for Preacher's Daughter
Region Date Format Label Ref.
Various May 12, 2022 Daughters of Cain [84]
April 4, 2025 LP record [46]

Notes

  1. ^ Attributed to Paste's Devon Chodzin,[14] Pitchfork's Evan Rytlewski,[9] and American Songwriter's Em Casalena.[28]
  2. ^ Attributed to V's Julia Koscelnik,[66] Billboard's Stephen Daw,[67] American Songwriter's Em Casalena,[68] and British GQ's Josiah Gogarty.[69]

References

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  2. ^ a b Dombal, Ryan (April 20, 2021). "Ethel Cain Fears No Darkness". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on March 3, 2025. Retrieved January 5, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d Daw, Stephen (May 12, 2022). "The Book of Ethel Cain: How the Alternative Phenom Built Up Her Own Reality Only to Tear It Down". Billboard. Archived from the original on February 28, 2025. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  4. ^ Kent, Matthew (February 11, 2021). "Ethel Cain reflects on the freedom of LA with revelatory new single 'Michelle Pfeiffer'". The Line of Best Fit. Archived from the original on March 6, 2025. Retrieved January 1, 2024.
  5. ^ Walker, Sophie (May 11, 2022). "Hayden Anhedönia and the invention of Ethel Cain". The Line of Best Fit. Archived from the original on December 3, 2024. Retrieved January 1, 2024.
  6. ^ Gordon, Arielle (April 28, 2021). "Ethel Cain: Inbred EP Album Review". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on January 14, 2025. Retrieved November 3, 2024.
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  8. ^ a b c Kenneally, Cerys (March 1, 2023). "Ethel Cain was working on a different concept album about 'angels and stuff' before Preacher's Daughter". The Line of Best Fit. Archived from the original on November 10, 2024. Retrieved November 10, 2024.
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  26. ^ "Review: Ethel Cain - Preacher's Daughter". Sputnikmusic. May 15, 2022. Archived from the original on April 19, 2023. Retrieved November 10, 2024.
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  28. ^ Casalena, Em (September 16, 2024). "5 Musicians To Listen to if You Love Lana Del Rey". American Songwriter. Archived from the original on March 3, 2025. Retrieved March 24, 2025.
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  30. ^ O'Connor, Roisin (December 24, 2022). "Ethel Cain responds after Obama includes her 'anti-war, anti-patriotism' song on his end-of-year playlist". The Independent. Archived from the original on March 20, 2025. Retrieved March 25, 2025.
  31. ^ a b c d e Bridgewater, Paul (May 11, 2022). "Ethel Cain builds a world of her own on the impressive debut Preacher's Daughter". The Line of Best Fit. Archived from the original on June 10, 2022. Retrieved June 10, 2022.
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  34. ^ Mongredien, Phil (May 14, 2022). "One to watch: Ethel Cain". The Guardian. Archived from the original on January 22, 2025. Retrieved November 10, 2024.
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  36. ^ a b Wang, Steffanee; McCarthy, Lauren (December 2, 2022). "From Renaissance To Gemini Rights: The Stories Behind 2022's Best Album Covers". Nylon. Archived from the original on December 9, 2024. Retrieved November 10, 2024.
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  49. ^ "Podcasts". KEXP-FM. Archived from the original on March 2, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
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