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Music World > News > Mitski Figures It Out & Feels the Love With First of Six Shows at NYC Shed Residency: Recap and Best Moments
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Mitski Figures It Out & Feels the Love With First of Six Shows at NYC Shed Residency: Recap and Best Moments

Written by: News Room Last updated: March 3, 2026
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Mitski Figures It Out & Feels the Love With First of Six Shows at NYC Shed Residency: Recap and Best Moments

Nobody steps on stage quite like Mitski. Most performers greet their audience by either bounding enthusiastically into the spotlight, racing on anxiously or shuffling on inconspicuously. Mitski walks out to the microphone in long, even, deliberate strides, almost as if carried on conveyor belt. Other artists make their excitement, cockiness and/or nervousness to be on stage palpable, but Mitski arrives like she’s been summoned there. It’s not a particularly emotional action, it is merely where she is supposed to be.

It’s a fair first impression from an artist who has engaged in as much push-pull with the concept of pop stardom — and with a fanbase that both lavished her with pop star-level adoration and placed pop star-level demands on her even before she started legitimately achieving pop star-level popularity — as any artist of the past decade. Meanwhile, she has both leaned into and recoiled from her ballooning success at various points in recent years, often with counterintuitive results: When she took a self-care hiatus from performing at the turn of the decade (and then the world shut down anyway), she got bigger than ever on TikTok; when she released an album full of scorching synth-rock singles at the height of her virality, it faded from commercial view with surprising speed; when she followed that a couple years later with an album full of dusty Americana ballads, one of them became her first-ever Billboard Hot 100 crossover hit.

You can almost feel a decision being made, both while listening to Mitski’s excellent new album Nothing’s About to Happen to Me and watching Monday night’s (Mar. 2) transfixing kickoff to her six-night residency at New York multi-purpose cultural center The Shed, that the artist was done trying to figuring out how much to play into or run from audience expectations — she was just going to stride out there and do what she was meant to do. While the performance was not as theatrical or choreographed as some of her recent tours, Mitski’s stone-faced intensity, increasingly powerful voice and purposeful, composed movements still gave the performance a dramatic edge, both in terms of the emotional stakes and the one-way nature of the show. When she dropped the imaginary wall between audience and performer halfway through to finally acknowledge the crowd with a big, friendly “Hello, hiya!” it was more rattling than any of the set’s mini-strobefests.

But while Mitski was certainly not taking requests on Monday night — and left several of her biggest crowd-pleasers on the table, including “First Love/Late Spring,” “Your Best American Girl” and “Nobody,” though she still has five nights left to hit on ’em if she wants — it’s still hard to imagine the complaints anyone could have with such a fully invested and brilliantly considered performance. She has the presence, the catalog and the fanbase to be headlining Madison Square Garden right now, but she’s still likely better served playing for the same sized crowds spread over a week at a multi-purpose art space, where can better control the details of her delivery, and not feel overwhelmed either by the crowds or how larger-than-life herself she has to become to match them. In a venue like The Shed, it feels like artist and audience have found the best way to properly appreciate one another.

“I love you,” Mitski swore to the two thousand-plus fans in attendance after introducing the night’s final song. “I know you don’t believe me, but I do.”

Here are the five best moments from Mitski’s residency-opening performance.

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  • A Tour of Tansy House

    Days before the show, Mitski also presented “The Tansy House” as an exhibit at The Shed, inspired by Grey Gardens and writer Shirley Jackson, meant to be the “spiritual home” of the Nothing’s About to Happen to Me album. Still open and tourable on the first night of the residency, fans were welcome to get in the mood for the performance by poring over the house’s book and vinyl collections, filling out Post-It notes for Mitski, and taking photos on a couch in front a blown-up image of the cat drawing on the album cover.

  • A Big ‘Change’

    One of the singles and obvious highlights from Happen is the ballad “I’ll Change for You,” a gorgeous and piercing and determinedly romantic song about desperation and loneliness, with a tender and gentle orchestral backdrop you’d expect to hear more in a Laufey vocal showcase. But Mitski demonstrates herself a powerhouse singer in her own right on the track — and live at The Shed, you could feel her voice filling every inch of the room as the song swelled to its climax, while gauzy clips from 1950 film noir Woman on the Run were projected behind her.

  • A “Special Delivery”

    Before this year, Mitski hadn’t performed “I Want You” — one of her biggest streaming hits, despite hailing from her self-released 2013 album Retired From Sad, New Career in Business — since 2019. She shouted the song out as being a “special” treat for fans, considering the rarity of her playing it, before teasing “another special delivery” incoming for those in attendance, in the form of “Francis Forever” from 2014’s Bury Me at Makeout Creek — a song Mitski has continued to play pretty regularly, but still a fan favorite that absolutely delighted longtime followers on Monday.

  • “Stay Soft,” Harder Than Ever

    The lukewarmly received Laurel Hell album was only represented by a couple songs on Monday, but one was “Stay Soft,” originally a hight point among the album’s ’80s-inspired, dancefloor-ready tracks. But to make it fit better with the more grinding, distorted art rock that provided the sonic core of her show, Mitski stripped the arrangement of its synths and add more crunching guitars on top of it, giving the song a heaviness and impact it never quite had in its album version. (Matching it with clips from the Bela Lugosi Dracula also helped give it a little extra sinister majesty.)

  • That Darn “Cat”

    Cats are of course all over Nothing’s About to Happen to Me, from the artwork to the tracklist, and the confused, misplaced fury of “That White Cat” made it sound like the centerpiece of this entire Mitski era when performed as the pre-encore closer on Monday night. Mitski’s insecurities over not being in control of her own life never felt more vivid as when she screamed, “It’s supposed to be my house/ But I guess, according to cats/ Now it’s his house” — gesturing at the screen playing black-and-white cat clips behind her at “according to cats.” Makes ’em sound like a worthy adversary, certainly.

TAGGED: Featured, genre rock, live review
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