Posts Tagged ‘Canada’

Macabre millennial nightmares, softened by dream-pop tranquilizers, reverberating from a casket-shaped music box. For Fans of: Lana Del Rey, Elliott Smith, the films of Harmony Korine

Nicole Dollanganger’s gothic folk songs detailing mental illness, guns, sexual violence, poverty and death are as beautiful as they are brutal. After exploring abandoned buildings growing up in Stouffville, Ontario — a small town near Toronto — the taxidermy enthusiast studied film at Ryerson University and started posting her dark, cinematic songs on Bandcamp. Soundbites and grisly themes from horror movies, Welcome to the Dollhouse and school shootings amplify these lo-fi bedroom recordings. Backed by acoustic guitar, Dollanganger’s winsome cover of Foster the People’s “Pumped Up Kicks” off 2013’s Columbine EP strips away the original’s party vibe to its chilling lyrical core. A demo of her latest album, Natural Born Losers, eventually reached her countrywoman Grimes. “It blew up my brain so hard that I literally started Eerie [Organization, a new artist collective] to fucking put it out,” the art-pop experimenter said in a press release. They performed together opening for Lana Del Rey in June and Dollanganger is supporting Grimes’ fall tour.

“I really enjoy hitting record on GarageBand. For an hour and a half I’ll just freestyle. I’ll get a chord progression going and start singing. I’ll record everything. Most of it’s trash, but usually there’s a line at least — like ‘drinking a cup of alligator blood’ — then I’ll build around that.”

Hear for Yourself: Echoing the pulse of Nine Inch Nails’ “Hurt,” Dollanganger sweetly toes the line of bruised love on “You’re So Cool.” Reed Fischer

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The Weather Station Loyalty

Tamara Lindeman is a Canadian folk singer who writes gentle songs that scan more like marginalia a wise reader left on a poem than poems themselves. They are sumptuous enough to recall the sweeping, gilded discography of Joni Mitchell, but only the laziest listener would draw that comparison based solely on nationality and gender. No, Tamara is more her own woman, her music is air-tight, like a study in the art of inverse, or an experiment with passion’s ability to remain austere. Explorations of love aren’t limited strictly to romance, either, but encompass friendships with other women on “Like Sisters” and “Shy Women”–two of the album’s standouts–or parse artistic admiration on “Tapes” and “Life’s Work.” On all of these, the album’s title comes through as a guiding principle, not quite commandment as much as personal chosen tenet.  work reminds us that sometimes the quietest voice is the one most worth listening to, the slowest moments might be the most brilliant, and the most valuable qualities are not visible to the naked eye.

Tradition-spanning contemplative folk that captures rare beauty in both lyrics and melodies,On her third album, Loyalty, Toronto-based songwriter Tamara Lindeman’s poetic reflections are set to minimalist combos of acoustic guitar, keys and just enough percussion to add bite to her words. For the album, she worked closely with Feist engineer Robbie Lackritz and Afie Jurvanen (a.k.a. Bahamas). “Lately, I’ve outsourced my boundaries to other people,” she says. “I require someone or something to tell me when to stop.” In the case of Loyalty, she found out with two months to spare that she was going to record at La Frette Studios in France. When she arrived, she was still rewriting, and had to sing scratch vocals on a few tracks. “There were still one or two words, or like one line that I was going to change,” she recalls. “Everyone just loved the scratch vocal. My two collaborators were like, ‘You’re not allowed to sing it again.'” In turn, her low, rich voice brings out the textures of dry grass, the cityscape, and relentless rain in intimate fashion. My style of songwriting is I tend to play guitar and daydream and sorta sing stuff. I tend to record it to remember. In that phase, I tend to sing all the same stuff anyone else sings. I sing about rain and the moon. My tendency over time is to refine that into something that feels really meaningful and I can hang onto it for a long time.”

The Weather Station’s “Loyalty” will be released May 12, 2015 on Paradise of Bachelors.

The Weather Station

 

Half Moon Run originally hails from the small Vancouver Island ocean community of Comox, British Columbia, but it wasn’t until its members relocated to Montreal that they really made a name for themselves. In the spring of 2012, the band caught almost everyone by surprise with an excellent debut album that achieved gold status in Canada. Three and a half years later, Half Moon Run has returned, more mature and in control, for its second album, Sun Leads Me On. “I Can’t Figure Out What’s Going On” is a standout; I love a song with a slow build, and this one definitely qualifies. It’s like putting a kettle on the stove: The song is calm at first until it starts simmering, hits a rolling boil and finally blasts forward in a heated finish. If you like Spoon, The Band or Sufjan Stevens, chances are you’ll love Half Moon Run

Dralms is the electro project alternative pop Christopher Smith (Vancouver), which produced the celebrated EP Crushed Pleats and Pillars & Pyre. According to the singer and musician, Dralms is finally the result of what he sought to create for a long time: a hypnotic music, melodic, neat, atmospheric and sometimes provocative. For this encoded, Smith worked with drummer Shaunn Watt, William Kendrick keyboardist and bassist Peter Carruthers. The producer Andy Dixon also added his two cents.Several cited Talk Talk, Radiohead, The Antlers to compare his work with other renowned artists. It’s your turn to play you pay comparisons. Released on October 2nd via Boompa Records.
“Shook” is taken from the forthcoming album of the same name, out 2nd October on Boompa Records (NA) and Full Time Hobby (UK).

© Chris Graham Photo 2014

When it comes to lyric writing there are, as the saying goes, many ways to skin a cat. Some go political, others poetic, some dress up their lyrics in metaphor, others just seem to babble complete nonsensical rubbish, However, one of the oldest and most oft repeated methods of lyrics is to take the route of the raconteur and tell us a story. Being modern world dwellers, we often now think of stories and literature as interchangeable; but of course we’ve been conveying events far longer that we’ve been writing them down, and ever since some clever clogs went and invented music we’ve been using that as one of our favourite methods of telling tales. Folk music in particular has been used as a way to pass stories on from person to person, long before we began recording music, and that influence remains a strong factor in songwriting within more modern folk musicians.

There’s plenty of fine examples of musical raconteuring, Whatever method people use to tell their story, or the story of others, the tradition of storytelling through song seems to be alive and well.

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Andy Shauf is a solo artist in the truest sense, playing and arranging the entirety of his music.

The heir apparent to Elliot Smith’s crown as the master of emotive and intimate song-writing. Andy largely wrote his debut album on his grandfather’s acoustic guitar, and accompanies it with a subtle pallet of gently metronomic drums, perfectly judged splashes of piano, and a decent amount of surprisingly pleasant Clarinet. We’ve never been huge fans of the instrument, but Andy uses his, a Christmas present from his family, to add a warm, smoky sway to proceedings that transports him from the isolation of snowy Canada to the bars of New Orleans.

Andy Shauf is from Regina, the capital city of the Saskatchewan province in Canada. Regina is home to Canada’s oldest continuously performing orchestra, which conjures up the image of a rather elderly man who’s been playing the tuba for ninety years without a break. Famous Regina residents include Naked Gun and Airplane star Leslie Nielsen, professional wrestler Brock Lesnar and Blues guitarist Colin James.

Four years of writing and one year in his make shift studio in his parents basement has resulted in his debut album. The Bearer Of Bad News finally saw the light of day when it was released by Portland based label Tender Loving Empire last June .

For a debut album, The Bearer Of Bad News is a frighteningly accomplished piece of work. Musically, it would sit neatly alongside the likes of Jonathan Wilson, Hiss Golden Messenger, or Hurray For The Riff Raff as modern day masters of the Americana sound. However, whether it’s Andy’s snowy Canadian routes or just his outlook on life, it’s a noticeably colder affair. His tales have a sense of darkness, whether he’s discussing heartbreak, spinning one of the three murder ballads that appear on the album, or even revelling in small town heroism, Andy’s tales always seem to possess a dark side, Perhaps unsurprisingly from a man who’s grown up in a region of Canada that regularly reaches twenty degrees below zero in winter, isolation is a key theme of the album; particularly evident on the entirely heartbreaking Covered In Dust, where over a downbeat twanging guitar, interspersed with morose cello embellishments, Andy paints us a picture of his own death-bed noting “I will die a poor man, covered in dust, dreaming of you”. Whilst on the beautifully produced Lick Your Wounds he suggests he will, “fall in love with my own loneliness” and on the emotive piano led I’m Not Falling Asleep he pleads for company asking an unidentified other to, “please stay a while, I’m not falling asleep.”

Wendell Walker is a powerfully dark tale of adultery and betrayal with a horrific ending that we’ll leave you discover yourself; it’s highly reminiscent of Mark Kozelek and Jimmy LaValle‘s You Missed My Heart. The album ends with two entwined tales: Jerry Was A Clerk and My Dear Helen, which offer different takes on the same tragic tale of a break in gone wrong, and accidental killing, whilst My Dear Helen is particularly wonderful; a piano ballad with the warmth of Jonathan Wilson, which entirely belies the songs dark lyrical undercurrent.

Perhaps our favourite moment though is the excellent The Man On Stage. Starting with loops of feedback; it resolves into a mellow guitar accompanied by some gentle drums, as Andy labels himself as, “the man on stage slurring your favourite songs, making up a few words as I go along” as if he’s been doing this for years, the source of his mallaise gradually unfurls once the chorus, oddly upbeat, in tempo at least, and recalling the excellent Jacob Golden, see him repeats the lyric, “I am not a poet I’m a broken heart”. There’s a beautiful simplicity to the way he writes, never more so than on this particular track.

Well perhaps you’ve guessed by now, but this album isn’t exactly a joyous affair; it’s moody, downbeat, even at times a bit miserable. Exactly how we like it basically, but it’s probably not for everyone.

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So fortunate to have had the opportunity to collaborate with animator Stephen McNally. Through his genius animation, he’s captured the lyrical theme – the desire to be loved yet a longing to be whole on one’s own.

We’re playing shows in Europe over the next month, put on your warm jacket and make the trek to come experience us

Braids “Deep In The Iris” LP, Braids is an art rock band from Calgary, Alberta, currently based in Montreal, Quebec. Braids currently consists of Raphaelle Standell-Preston, Austin Tufts and Taylor Smith. The band met at a young age and began collaborating in high school

Relationships have a way of hijacking your whole body. You don’t just give your heart to someone as a gift; you do it so they can move in and start paying rent on that tiny little little panic room for when it will inevitably go bad. The single “Hoodwink” by Canadian trio The Beverleys is for the moment you hit the switch and need that person to get the fuck out of you before you explode.

Vocalist Susie Burke lists off all the places lovers tend to lurk: “In my head, in my heart, in my skin.” The fuzzy guitars sound like they’re sizzling off a steady flow of tears into steam because sometimes the only way to exorcise him from your mind is through an amp.

The debut LP Brutal from The Beverleys is out today from Buzz Records.

Braids.

Breakup records are nothing new. They’re one of the most practiced concoctions in pop music today but every now and then, one comes along that pushes the art form in new directions. “Deep in the Iris”, the third album from Montreal trio Braids, is one such album. Rather than continuing the evolution of their former sound—as displayed on 2013’s stark, searing “Flourish//Perish” the band instead takes a softer, sunnier approach. While the lyrics are as cutting and introspective as anything you’ll come across, the music is anything but. Departing from jarring arrangements, the band employs warm Björk-esque beats and inviting rhythmic soundscapes as a backdrop to Raphaelle Standell’s stunning vocal work. Deep in the Iris doesn’t so much explore new depths as it does new heights. It isn’t the sound of fracturing, but the healing process.

Braids “Deep In The Iris” LP
Out 28th April on Arbutus Records / Flemish Eye.

There’s placid grace to Deep In The Iris, the third and latest full-length by Braids, but don’t let that fool you. Something’s churning beneath the album’s calm, cool surface. Unlike Flourish // Perish, the Montreal trio’s icy, challenging record from 2013, Deep In The Iris represents a thaw: Throughout its nine songs, singer Raphaelle Standell-Preston and her cohorts Taylor Smith and Austin Tufts art-rock with melodic allure, confessional directness and quivering warmth. Where Flourish // Perish used prickly electronics and cavernous arrangements to hold humanity at arm’s length,Deep In The Iris turns those same elements into lulling hymns to cleansing and redemption. Braids is not only more approachable than ever; it’s downright magnetic.

Her breathy vocals, as liquid and acrobatic as ever, elevate a line that in lesser hands would have seemed clichéd. Meanwhile, the band underscores the bittersweet melancholy with hypnotic patterns of percussion and synths. The hooks are subtle, but they’re huge.

That boldness, both instrumentally and lyrically, is even more striking in “Miniskirt.” In the past, Standell-Preston has couched her lyrics in a haze of poetic abstraction; here, she goes for the throat, calling out misogyny, the male gaze and the language of slut-shaming with piercing, confessional force. The song could almost pass as an epic R&B ballad, at least at first: After a sumptuous, stadium-worthy intro, it corkscrews through a tangle of jittery beats and atmospheric eeriness that never wanders into self-indulgence. Even within the album’s most complex and confrontational track, there’s an immaculate pop edge that mesmerizes.

By the time “Warm Like Summer” bursts into a dazzle of soulful croons, glimmering loops and shuffling drums, it appears that the album’s springtime release is no accident: This is the sound of renewal and regrowth, as joyful and as painful as that can be. In “Letting Go,” Standell-Preston sings with dreamy contentment, “We laid on the bank and had our fill.” On the lush, stuffed-to-bursting Deep In The Iris, Braids has done exactly that.

Brought to you by The Auras Collective, Written and performed by The Auras. “I Believe in Everything” Written and performed by Tess Parks & The Auras. Produced and engineered by Jose Contreras. Catch Tess Parks at the Liverpool International Festival of Psychedelica

I Believe in Everything –
Islands in the Sea –
Charlton Heston

 

RON SEXSMITH Really Ought to need no introduction he is often spoken about as a songwriters songwriter, He is able to count Ray Davies and Elvis Costello ( who he sounds very similar too especially his songwriting style)  amongst his advocates and many artists like ROD STEWART, KD LANG, KATIE MELUA, NICK LOWE AND EVEN MICHAEL BUBLÉ have all covered and performed Sexsmiths songs – Yet as an  recording artist in his own write commercial success and wider notoriety has so far eluded , Now at 51 he releases his Fourteenth album CAROUSEL ONE, released in March this year, is a fine collection of beautifully crafted moments and could quietly find itself shuffling up alongside more familiar names in the 2015 albums of the year lists. Ron Sexsmith is about to head out on tour, including a couple of weeks on the motorways of the UK in October with a show included at the Glee Club in Nottingham .

“Can’t Get My Act Together” by Ron Sexsmith. From the album “Carousel One” – available now on CD, 180 gram vinyl or Digital