Autumn Variations by Ed Sheeran

Album cover for Autumn Variations - Ed Sheeran
1. Magical
3:14
2. England
3:46
3. Amazing
4:05
4. Plastic Bag
3:49
5. Blue
2:33
6. American Town
3:17
7. That's on Me
3:47
8. Page
3:51
9. Midnight
2:59
10. Spring
2:58
11. Punchline
3:26
12. When Will I Be Alright
2:55
13. The Day I Was Born
4:12
14. Head > Heels
4:13

Autumn Variations is the seventh studio album by English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran. It was released on 29 September 2023 through his record label, Gingerbread Man Records. All tracks on the album were solely produced by Aaron Dessner, except the track "Spring", which was produced by Dessner together with his twin brother Bryce. The album also serves as Sheeran's second project of 2023, following the May release of his previous album -, and is the first studio album for which he owns the copyright. Background On 24 August 2023, Sheeran announced the album on social media, in which he said: "Last autumn, I found that my friends and I were going through so many life changes. After the heat of the summer, everything either calmed, settled, fell apart, came to a head or imploded". He also added: "My dad and brother told me about a composer called Elgar, who composed Enigma Variations, where each of the 14 compositions were about a different one of his friends. This is what inspired me to make this album." The album was his first album released independently on his own label, Gingerbread Man Records. Sheeran said that there would be no singles or videos released to promote the album. Although one single, "American Town", was sent to Italian contemporary hit radio the same day as the album was released.

As Ed Sheeran was crafting his sixth studio album, 2023’s <i>-</i> (pronounced “subtract”, the last in his mathematical album series), something else began to take shape. Just three months after <i>-</i>’s arrival, Sheeran unveiled <i>Autumn Variations</i>, made in tandem with the most personal record he’d ever produced. But if <i>-</i> was about the seismic life events Sheeran had weathered—the sudden death of his best friend, the discovery that his wife had a tumour while pregnant with their second child, Sheeran’s experiences of depression and anxiety—<i>Autumn Variations</i> was shaped by events occurring in his friends’ worlds, too. “Last autumn [in 2022], I found that my friends and I were going through so many life changes,” said Sheeran in a statement. “After the heat of the summer, everything either calmed, settled, fell apart, came to a head or imploded.” Perhaps surprisingly for a megastar singer-songwriter most commonly associated with pop, hip-hop and folk, inspiration for the shape of <i>Autumn Variations</i> came from the classical world. The album’s title is a nod to Elgar’s <i>Enigma Variations</i>, a work of 14 compositions about the English composer’s friends, which Sheeran’s father and composer brother Matthew had told him about. Sheeran’s compositions were made alongside The National’s Aaron Dessner—the producer who collaborated with Taylor Swift on <i>folklore</i> and <i>evermore</i>, and who Sheeran tapped up for <i>-</i>. Announcing the album, Sheeran spoke of how he “clicked immediately” with Dessner: “We wrote and recorded non-stop and this album was born out of that partnership.” <i>Autumn Variations</i> still finds Sheeran in <i>-</i>’s intimate, string-laden and often acoustic settings, fuelled by Dessner’s intricate, organic and appropriately cosy production. Yet things feel brighter, lighter, as though the dark clouds that hung over <i>-</i> have largely cleared. There are light-footed guitars (“Midnight”; “England”, which heralds the cobweb-clearing power of the British coastline against crashing-wave-like drums), Sheeran’s trademark rapping (“That’s on Me”, which layers Sheeran’s voice over Dessner’s characteristically sinewy strings) and sing-along choruses (“Amazing”). But there are also soft, whispered acoustic ballads (“When Will I Be Alright”, “Blue”) and minor-chord outpourings (“Punchline”). And the stories Sheeran tells move from new love (“Magical”) and fresh starts (the sweet, <i>Friends</i>-referencing “American Town”) to harder times laced with regret, loneliness and wishing you could just get out of your own way. “Every time I crack a smile I can sense another tear coming,” he sings on “Amazing”. Since 2021’s <i>=</i>, Sheeran’s music has often concerned itself with the realities of getting older, from the good (becoming a father, turning 30, feeling more at one with the person you’ve chosen to spend your life with) to the painful: loss, ill health, grief. On <i>Autumn Variations</i>, Sheeran doesn’t shy away from those complexities (“Is this just getting older?” he muses on “That’s on Me”; on “Punchline”, he similarly asks, “Is this just growing up?”), but there’s also optimism that sunnier times will come back round; that, eventually, the seasons do change. “I’m holding out for spring,” sings Sheeran on “Spring”. “We can’t let winter win.”