[1] Produced by Lynn and his longtime collaborator Gino Mari and recorded and mixed at The Country Club studios in Portland, the record has garnered celebrity endorsements from actor and comedian Jay Mohr,[2] Author and Emmy Award-winning journalist Sheila Hamilton,[3] Lynn's mentors and former label mates The Dandy Warhols and others.
[4] Lynn sited his friends and former labelmates The Dandy Warhols for being the inspiration behind the song's modern garage rock sound.
[5] In February 2016 Paste Magazine released the album art for Adieu and Vortex Music Magazine released the liner notes, where Lynn writes about his ongoing struggle with depression, surviving suicidal ideation in the face of grief, and his own resilience in the face of persistent mental and behavioral health challenges.
"[8] In June 2016, two days after the mass killing of LGBT people and their allies at Pulse Orlando, Lynn and Mari released a new charity single from the record titled "Go There When You Want To Be Loved" in support of the families and survivors most impacted by the tragedy.
[14] The September issue of Blurt Magazine gave the album 4 out of 5 stars, and NBC's "Live at 7" called the record "masterful" during a segment with Lynn and Producer Gino Mari.
is quite possibly Logan Lynn’s best album yet, as each song here builds on the next for an impressively cohesive set, ending in the brilliantly wry "Oh, Lucifer".
In their review of the album, they wrote "Taken at the surface level, Adieu would simply be another peppy, upbeat synth-pop record – albeit a very good one – with sharp, tight arrangements and eloquent lyrics.
Diving into the lyric sheet cracks the shiny veneer, revealing an unexpected darkness, as Lynn peels off his skin, to share his shredded nerves and modern-day anxieties, delving into the seamy, sleazy side of life, while sounding like a Threepenny Opera.
The melodicism and catchy arrangements – like the toppling piano chords and pots-and-pans percussion of 'Go There When You Want To Be Loved' – are a perfect microcosm of what makes this album so exceptional, so unique, so palatable.
In the review, Ghettoblaster wrote that Logan Lynn is "Like a pride-parade rock band fronted by a former Christian fundie superhero schooled in the finer points of Brian Wilson and The Dandy Warhols, who had the power-pop potential to become something resembling an Indie/Glam Macklemore/Owl City hybrid.
[24] Visual artist Dandy Jon collaborated with Logan Lynn on an illustrated video for the B-side of the We Will Overcome single, Break Me Down, which was first leaked online in October 2015, then officially released March 8, 2016.
Logo TV premiered the video and said "Logan Lynn Is reclaiming hell as a safe space for queers" and "skewers the religious right in a most devious way" about the release.
Fred Phelps of the Westboro Baptist Church and giving him electroshock therapy, freeing parishioners from murderous cult leader Jim Jones and putting Donald Trump in prison.