Scenery is a pop,[1]R&B,[1][2]neo soul,[3]dream pop,[3]post-disco[1] album with touches of gospel,[1]jazz,[4] and tropical music.[5] King recorded the album in a studio build by her and Jeremy Most in a garage in the Catskill Mountains.[1] The move from her urban life in New York City to the Catskills is reflected in the album's title, as King felt she needed a "change of scenery".[6] The lyrics of album closer "Go Back" also touch on this, with the line "so I lick my wounds, I got nothing to lose, I’m heading out on my own".[7]
Much of the album is about King getting over an ex while finding new love.[1] "Look at Me Now" shows King taunting her lover with "joy and spite reinforced with lively xylophone" and Queen-inspired funk guitar.[1] "Running" is a gospel-inspired ballad where King "yearns to forgive and accept herself."[1][4] "Can't Hold Me" features South Asian percussion, guitar licks and "velvety" synths[4] The quiet storm song "Blue Light" sees King "surrounded by waves of backing vocals" and "swelling Disney-like strings"[3] "Forgiveness" is an electro-ballad that "glides with the same restraint and class as Sade’s most rewarding songs".[3] "Remind Me" is an electro-R&B song that "recalls classic era Madonna or Whitney Houston."[7][2] "Teach You" is a retro-soul[3] and calypso[7] song that is "playful and tender at once" as King gives her lover lessons on how to treat her better.[5][4] The acoustic jazz of "Caliche" tells "a story about being lost in life, paired with Most’s exotic production: complex rhythms, hushed vocals and whoops and hollers in the distance, like the sombre flip side to Lionel Richie’s All Night Long."[5][4] "2nd Guess" evokes Parade-era Prince as King sings about being "free, lost in a sudden romantic diversion, attesting before sheets of noise evoking blinding sunlight that 'Life is always sweeter when there's no regrets.'"[1][4][3]
Scenery received generally positive reviews from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 76, based on eight reviews.[8] Andy Kellman of AllMusic rated the album four out of five stars. He wrote that the album "refines the seemingly instinctive and contemporary hybrid sound of 2015's The Switch with more mature pop informed by traditional singer/songwriters, classic R&B into the post-disco era, the high-tech end of mid-'80s top 40 radio, and even a little gospel. All elements are recombined while being neither overtly retro nor wholly allegiant to anything other than durable songcraft (with the occasional sonic flourish)."[1]Pitchfork's Maggie Lange foung that the "album maps life's changes to sleek, vibrant R&B that's packed with 1980s soundtrack flourishes and big moments; it's the perfect frame for her extraordinary voice."[2] Ryan B. Patrick from Exclaim! found that "with Scenery, [King] makes a statement [...] The 12-track project comes ever-so-close to its intended level of sublime, yet plays things on the safe side: pleasant, powerful, precise. It waves over listening with its earnestness — soothing the consciousness rather than expanding it. It's a clear articulation of King's mastery and intent; Scenery is musically sound, entrancing and implores that you take a look."[4] Chaka V. Grier noted that "with her sparkling 80s-R&B-evoking voice, King sounds like she emanates music rather than sings it [...] In a lesser writer's hands, love songs could convey hackneyed lyrics about desire and heartbreak, but not King. She adds magic to the mundane, cracking it open to reveal multifaceted nuances: longing, pleasure, resentment, jealousy and also self-love."[5]
Change of Scenery is a remix EP by American singer-songwriter Emily King, featuring remixes of songs from her third studio album Scenery. It was released on October 11, 2019 by ATO Records.[14]
The song is heard playing at the roller rink when Stevonnie is skating.
Instrumental album
Scenery (Instrumentals), An album of instrumental versions of all the album's tracks (excluding "Interlude (What Love Is)") was released on June 19, 2020.[15]