Is Jens Lekman for real? Funnily enough, it’s the very intensity of the Swedish singer-songwriter’s earnestness that raises the question. Even when grounded in autobiography, his stories are gaudily and perhaps implausibly embroidered. His music is delectable, but in the way of an absurdly fancy galette that looks almost too good to eat. Even for the sweetest tooth, it can be an acquired taste: Piling his pastry with the most sumptuous orchestral toppings, then adding thick dollops of syrupy crooning, he comes on strong. I’ll never forget when the milkman at a coffee shop where I worked arrived while Night Falls over Kortedala was playing and groaned, “What is this, Neil Sedaka?” Or the mix of confusion, concern, and dawning horror on my partner’s face when she walked in during a schmaltzy patch of his new album Songs for Other People’s Weddings. In that moment, she may have been lost to Jens forever.
But it’s a taste that, once acquired, can’t easily be sated—that lacquered fruit, that heavy cream, those sharp observations curlicued in frosting. It might actually be an anti-taste: uncoolly garrulous, glorying in chintz, scoffing at moderation. Mariachi horns, beatnik spoken-word interludes, Disney movie piano themes, soothing spa flutes, smoldering Sergio saxophones, country boot scoots, theme-park medieval motifs, and strings splashing everywhere in champagne-glass towers: There is nothing Lekman won’t try to wring a few more drops out of the oldest subject. If all his music is about love, then Songs for Other People’s Weddings gets to its beating heart, though glazed in the fine layers of truth and fiction that make him one of a kind.
Some 20 years ago, not long after Lekman’s sampledelic twee pop first broke out, he took up a sideline as a wedding singer. It started as a lark: He put a song called “If You Ever Need a Stranger (To Sing at Your Wedding)” on his debut album. Some fans called his bluff. But it became a lifeline when streaming started gutting recording artists’ revenue. This reality breaks into the fizzy orch-pop paradise of “A Tuxedo Sewn for Two” when the wedding singer makes a mordant remark about Spotify to two guys standing before a urinal, uncomfortably stitched into a single suit.The song also features references to Plato’s Symposium and The Human Centipede and finally breaks down into a saloon ditty with a gin-and-juice kicker. Welcome to the anything-goes world of Lekman, whose music inhabits a kind of heart-shaped Schrödinger’s box—a presentation so frou-frou that it seems like some kind of gimmick. The trick is that it’s not.