The Merrier – Green Mages | EP Review

Lonely Ghost Records

Perhaps it’s because I was born on Thanksgiving Day, but something in my soul begins to really awaken during the fall. My favorite albums suit the dreary weather and shortened days, lending themselves to the innate hibernation of these months. Crunchy, fuzzy guitars, screamo vocals, and dense instrumentals are my ideal backdrop for rainy commutes and chilly weekends at home. Naturally, when Jake Stephens of The Merrier sent me the project’s new EP, Green Mages, back at the peak of summer, I knew it was perfect for autumn even then. When we were chatting about the release, I mentioned this to Jake, who was in agreement and excited that I had picked up on this. 

Bridging the genres of dreamo, chiptune, bedroom pop, and electronica, The Merrier is known for his immersively warm music and stellar collaborations. And when I say ‘collaborations,’ I mean it: practically every Merrier song features vocals from another artist, usually from within the online DIY sphere. His release If We Fall Asleep Too Early was one of my favorites of 2023, featuring underground heroes like exciting!!excellent!! and Equipment. One year later, Jake released an album titled i hope i'm with my cats when the flood comes, which was the project’s first full-length release. Genre boundaries are pushed throughout the album, verging into neo-soul on “iso,” flirting with hyperpop on “the mid outdoors,” and even offering a couple of the project’s first fully solo songs without accompanying features. This constant experimentation and expansion continues onto Green Mages – Jake is compelling, fresh, and innovative as ever, acting as architect and mastermind as he constructs seven brilliant songs.

The EP opens with a blast of chiptune notes on “jester,” a charming and upbeat track featuring fellow Cleveland rock band Mud Whale. It’s dotted with cozy electronic sound effects that make you feel like the main character in a video game. I love a rowdy album opener, and “jester” pulls you in with raucous vocals like “Get on your feet and dance with me!” and “TWERK UPSIDE DOWN ON THE WALL!” Even though I can’t do any of that on my daily commute, it’s deeply cathartic to scream those lyrics while I wither away at yet another red light. As chaotically as “jester” begins, it immediately ends and transitions into the groovy track “timing,” featuring neo kiio. “timing” is a little more mellow, and I feel my shoulders relax as the beat dances through my ears. This is a delicious amalgam of genres: screamo melds effortlessly with hyperpop and hip-hop influences, decorated with Jake’s guitar lines that spin like sugar around the track’s core.

When I was little, my family would regularly take our Land Cruiser up to the high country of the Sierra Nevadas. As we wound up incline after incline, I used to close my eyes and watch the muted colors of the autumn sunlight dance across my eyelids. It was just us five up there, golden aspens whispering to each other as we explored the deep forests and quiet lakes hidden above the tree line. Listening to the second half of Green Mages reminds me of these days: “we saw it!” featuring Gabbo is soft and tender. Cascading melodies and sumptuous reverb surround the listener like a fleece pullover, cozy and warm. If only music were a time machine – I’d give anything to transport myself back to one of those adventures, just for an hour. Even so, I suppose “we saw it!” brings me as close as it gets to time travel without atomic reassembly. The energy of Green Mages amps back up with the closing track “eclipse!,” featuring Midwest emo stalwarts Short Fictions. This is a song for blasting out your car windows as dusk wraps the horizon. Brash and raucous, “eclipse!” makes me feel brave: proof that sometimes medicine comes in the form of a good emo song. 

The wizardry of The Merrier is proven on every magical track of Green Mages. Creativity and innovation are woven through the entire EP: Jake’s emotive writing is complemented brilliantly by each guest he brings on board, no matter their niche. And as the days get darker and colder at last, Green Mages is autumn’s welcome herald.


Britta Joseph is a musician and artist who, when she isn’t listening to records or deep-diving emo archives on the internet, enjoys writing poetry, reading existential literature, and a good iced matcha. You can find her on Instagram @brittajoes.

The Merrier – Cyclical | EP Review

Remember when the internet was fun? Remember multi-colored clamshell MacBooks and AIM away messages? Remember agonizing over your Top 8 and risking a computer virus just to download a sketchy file named “nine_inch_nails-HURT-014.mp3” for your morning bus ride? Well, The Merrier remembers, and throughout Cyclical, the hyper-collaborative bedroom pop project born of Jake Stephens aims to recapture that feeling of boundless early internet wonder… or at least as much of it as can be salvaged in the toxic, post-apocalyptic, ad-riddled landscape of 2022.

This isn’t some Vaporwave-esque adoption of internet aesthetics for their own sake, but rather a project that couldn’t have existed without the collaborative spirit of the internet. While most of the songs here possess a baseline dreamo soundscape, the concept behind this project turns it into something more compelling than the sum of its parts as Stephens invites a host of different artists in to collaborate on each song. This process results in a collection of tracks with vastly different sounds and ideas that are unconcerned with genre or any larger album-wide statement. It’s like if Gorillaz were DIY… and good.

Listening to this EP feels like those now-ironic book covers showing a super cool 90s teen riding a keyboard as a metaphor for surfing the internet. Guest vocalists materialize and float by like web pages from a bygone era, each inviting the listener into their respective narrator’s rich inner world.

Cyclical begins with “BMO,” a song inspired by the Adventure Time character boasting a lovely little synth line that sounds like it was ripped straight out of a long-lost 80s workout tape. Propelled forward by this instrumental, Talor Smith of Biitchseat lends their vocals to the track, giving the listener a relatable perspective that wouldn’t have sounded out of place on last year’s I’ll become kind. After an instrumental dropout followed by a swirl of dreamy “ooohs,” the track seamlessly transitions to a verse from the Japanese lo-fi indie-pop band BLUEVALLEY, which adds a unique flavor to the song without sounding incongruous. In the final minute, these two vocal features stack on top of each other, resulting in a striking contrast of sounds that could have only been brought together under the Merrier moniker. 

From here, the release winds from the catchy and biblical “Cathedral” to planetary astral projections of love on “Venus” for an ever-shifting scope that expertly utilizes its cast of guest appearances. Sandwiched between these songs is “Gold,” which works the EP’s title into a cute turn of phrase over a bright and sunny instrumental that, ironically, would have fit in perfectly over the end credits of Adventure Time. Just as you wonder where Cyclical will go next, Merrier throws “Vaminos” at you for a vibrant rap song whose verses from Ponz The Angel and Masakiio evoke the carefree joy of 2016-era Lil Uzi Vert.

After the metaphorical (and literal) high of “Vaminos,” Cyclical wraps on the punctual and groovy “Scenery,” featuring guest vocals from Ohio-based multi-instrumentalist Superdestroyer. Despite its shorter running time and peppier pace, the final minute of this song switches over to a spaced-out rainy day instrumental as Merrier allows Superdestroyer to croon the EP’s last lines.

I hope that you know
I would do anything
To make sure that you're happy
Because you make me happy
I hope that I make you happy
I hope that I make you happy
I hope that I make you happy

Maybe it’s just due to how hypnotic this repetition is, but the line “I hope that I make you happy” feels like the closest thing this EP has to a thesis, given its diverse spread of perspectives and sounds. Cyclical is a collection of songs that inherently cannot have an overarching message, but this final refrain feels like a perfect note to send the listener off on. After all, if we don’t have happiness, music, and each other, what else is there?

Cyclical represents an often-unfulfilled promise of the internet; that we would be able to connect with strangers who share our interests and artistic visions, collaborate with them, and create something special together. With Stephens as the creative ringleader, Cyclical is a diverse and exhilarating collection of songs representing pure, creative collaboration. Even upon repeat listens, this EP will keep you wondering what could possibly be coming next and always manages to leave you amazed at the result.