The Mountain Goats Turn Catastrophe Into Theater on Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan

The only thing literature loves more than a man facing the end of the world is a man stranded at sea. On his 23rd album, the Mountain Goats’ John Darnielle, ever the completist, gives us both. Weirdly, he’s not the first John to do so. The Bible’s John of Patmos got there first; alone on a shore, seeing visions of the end times. Darnielle, for his part, adds a rhythm section and, crucially, two witnesses. As the record unfurls, the real difference between prophet and person becomes responsibility: the prophet speaks to heaven; the person has to answer to those standing next to him, shivering by the fire. While The Book of Revelation made a man’s faith in God the proof of prophecy, Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan trains its gaze on another kind of devotion too—faith in one’s fellow man, and what’s left when it fails.

The conceit is clean enough to diagram: three men survive a shipwreck, wash ashore, and wait for rescue that never comes. There’s the narrator, the rational observer; Peter Balkan, the captain whose concussion-induced visions of deliverance curdle into delusion; and Adam, the quiet third who vanishes somewhere between one song and the next, walking into the sea to never return. The band plays it like liturgy: calm, stately, rarely hurried. That composure is the record’s signature and its tell. This is an apocalypse scored by legato strings, an end smoothed until it sounds merciful. The day of death, the narrator sings on the closing track, is just “the day we finally get free.” Death is release, at least in a narrative; it’s the only way to exit the dramatic confines of the script. In that sense, Through This Fire isn’t about survival itself so much as it is the slow, practiced art of performing the inevitable as a means of surviving. And what medium understands that better than the stage?

If Bleed Out was Darnielle’s action movie and Jenny from Thebes his “fake musical,” Through This Fire is the real thing: an honest-to-god musical tragedy where everyone walks into the theater knowing the ending. Darnielle’s songs have long felt like monologues overheard from the wings, the audience dropped in mid-soliloquy and left to piece together the story. This time, he builds the set too: wreckage at the lip of the proscenium, kelp tangled on beams, songs unfolding in strict chronological sequence. For a band once defined by the raw intimacy of a man and his boombox, it’s a striking metamorphosis.

The record’s concept hits hardest when structure and story fuse—when form becomes function. “Overture” and “Your Bandage” make the best case for it: the former a true prologue, threading the album’s leitmotifs into a single instrumental breath (the band’s first ever instrumental track!), and the latter a duet performed by one voice that still reads unmistakably as dialogue. Darnielle doesn’t need to mark the switch between speakers; the tension does it for him. “Your Bandage” captures the moment before collapse, one man raving himself into divinity while another tries to coax him back to reason, or at least to rest. It’s theater through melody, faith breaking apart in real time, and it works because Darnielle trusts the medium to do the heavy lifting. Additionally, “Dawn of Revelation” thrums as the first sign of the deuteragonist’s devolution, a fevered solo where prophecy and psychosis blur so neatly you can’t tell which came first. The acoustic, beautifully evocative “Rocks in My Pockets,” sung from Adam’s perspective before he walks into the sea, lands perfectly as a character’s final soliloquy delivered to an audience who won’t grasp its significance until the next scene.

In theory, then, the format is the perfect vessel for Darnielle’s lifelong obsession with narrative and fate: a tragedy aware of its end before it begins. But the staging also seals something off. The voices are confined to the spotlight, each cue hit and each exit neat. There’s less room for the listener to wander in the dark, feeling out the shapes themselves. Perhaps that’s why Adam—whose absence is more narratively significant than his presence—paradoxically feels the most compelling. His one song, “Rocks in My Pockets,” anchors itself in tactile details: a stone from Seattle, initials in bark, small rituals of the once-living. Those specifics breathe. It feels, both sonically and spiritually, closer to the Mountain Goats of old—and for better or for worse, it does prove the strength of Darnielle’s classic approach. The narrator and Balkan, by contrast, exist in philosophical air, their pasts sketched in broad moral strokes rather than messy, lived texture. The mystery remains, but the messy scaffolding that once made it feel unbearably human has been sanded down, polished until each character fits their outline.

Similarly, the finale, “Broken to Begin With,” arguably leans a little too hard on explication. Its refrain—“It was broken to begin with / It was like that when we got here”—is repeated like moral punctuation, threading through lines that restate the record’s premise (“When the archaeologists arrive / No proof that we were ever here alive / Me and Peter Balkan and you, friend / Until the dream ran out of oxygen”). Every tragedy ends the same way, but we go to see them anyway because of what happens between the curtains rising and falling. But Through This Fire, so fixated on that fatalistic determinism (which, to be fair, is fascinating!), sometimes overlooks the grounding mundanities that make the ending sting—the quiet moments wrapping bandages, feeling the weight of the stone in your pocket.

Midway through the record, several songs find the narrator circling the same resignation as he watches his former captain lose his mind, the variations more textual than emotional. There’s “Peru”’s “when your gift begins to consume you / one of us will have to be strong,” to “Through This Fire”’s “bear me on the breath of dawn / very soon we’ll both be gone / it’s getting hard to hear you, friend / waiting for the world to end,” to “Your Glow”’s “just me left now, and you, about / to see what lies beyond”—they’re gorgeous, yes, but increasingly familiar; the same surrender restated with minor modulations. Darnielle’s lyricism remains crystalline, but the repetition dulls the knife. None cut as sharply as the restrained heartbreak of “Your Bandage” or the fatal calm of “Rocks in My Pockets.”

That sameness seeps into the music, too. For all the tumult of its premise, Through This Fire is a surprisingly pleasant listen—sweeping, mid-tempo, decorous even when the subject matter calls for chaos. The arrangements are lush: strings, brushed drums, the occasional saxophone swell. You can hear how tightly everything is built; each instrument enters on cue, crescendos rise and resolve neatly. It’s beautiful, and it’s rarely raw. Even when a ship sinks, the song just exhales. The few times the record breaks the surface—“Dawn of Revelation,” with its militaristic drumming and ecstatic guitar solo, or the theatrical build of “Armies of the Lord,” which charges straight into imagined apocalypse—feel like being caught by the riptide, but elsewhere, the record ebbs in and out with the tide. The record depicts catastrophe with grace, yes, but never quite becomes it.

Yet even when it avoids collapse, Through This Fire is impeccably arranged. It’s light-years from the lo-fi howl of Zopilote Machine (which is, to be fair, a record I love). “The Lady from Shanghai 2” drives the point home—a sequel to a 1992 track of the same name, now reimagined with elegant, layered instrumentation. Producer and multi-instrumentalist Matt Douglas gives the album its spine, balancing Jon Wurster’s fluid percussion and an ensemble that gleams like a miniature orchestra. Karen Galvin’s strings and Mikaela Davis’s harp glint like light on water; Nicole Lawrence’s pedal steel and Ben Loughran’s synths ripple underneath; Gabriel Mairson’s French horn blares revelation. “The “Overture” alone is a marvel—a 4-minute suite that stitches together at least a dozen melodic motifs, surfacing fragments of “Through This Fire,” “Fishing Boat,” and “Dawn of Revelation” between flurries of harp and percussion into a single rising tide. Elsewhere, the band toggles easily between prog-rock grandeur, baroque orchestration, and jazz inflection, none feeling out of place. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s harmonies—which are occasionally distracting, if only for the unfair fact that his voice is simply too recognizable—add Broadway flair, as does the mock-chorus of the “Latter Revelation Company Singers,” featuring Douglas, Wurster, Darnielle, and the Replacements’ Tommy Stinson. The theater of it all isn’t subtle, but what theater is?

Maybe that’s the paradox of Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan: a record that dramatizes collapse but—for better or for worse—never quite gives in to it. It’s gorgeous, exacting, and ultimately cyclical, much like theater itself, where death is just the cue for the lights to come back up. When faith falters and the world doesn’t end on cue, what’s left is the repetition: the music, the memory, the act of saying the words again until they sound like truth. The island sinks, the curtain falls, and the show must go on.

Casey Epstein-Gross is Assistant Music Editor at Paste and is based in New York City. Follow her on X (@epsteingross) or email her at [email protected].