The second album by Montreal art-rock group Corridor smashes through both artistic and language barriers to a place in this list. A colourful collision of technical ingenuity and emotional harmonies, you’ll find it a compelling listen even if you don’t understand Quebecois French. There’s maybe shades of Preoccupations, The Byrds, Television et al, but ‘Supermercado’ definitely marks out its own space. Try out ‘Data Fontaine’ and ‘Coup D’epee’ and wonder at why this album passed you by.
Watch the new video from Patrick Watson for his brand new single ‘Broken’ which was recorded at studio PM in Montreal last month.
“This is a song I just felt like sharing before the next record. Dedicated to the storms we went through.” Patrick Watson Of the video, recently shot in Montreal, director Pedro Pires says: “It was a real pleasure to work with Patrick to create this video. We started with simple intuitive ideas such as characters fleeing or running away in fast moving vehicles. I then proposed to use reflections and flares to fragment the light to reveal a more impressionist moody state of mind of these various “broken” characters”.
Patrick Watson – Broken (Official Video) the new single.
The Barr Brothers recorded 40 tracks when making their 2014 sophomore album Sleeping Operator, so it’s no big surprise the folksy Montreal band have a whole pile of extra songs left over. Now they’ve shared five of them in the form of a new EP.
Alta Falls is made up of extra material from the sessions, and it’s available immediately. It includes a short instrumental overture (“Oscilla”), a six-minute piano ballad (“Alta Falls”) and a few beautiful Americana tunes.
In a statement, the band describe this EP has being made up of “some of our favourite misfits from the Sleeping Operator sessions.” For those with Spotify, Alta Falls can be streamed at the bottom of this page; scroll past the tracklist.
Alta Falls:
1. Oscilla
2. Burn Card
3. Alta Falls
4. Never Been a Captain
5. May 4th
Tim Darcy had a great solo album in 2017. It’s nice to see him back so soon in 2018 with a new LP by the whole band. The follow-up 2015’s solid Sun Coming Down was recorded at Rare Book Room in Brooklyn with producer Nicolas Vernhes (Deerhunter, Animal Collective). Along with the usual instruments, vibraphone, drum machines, a 70-piece choir, and “justly intonated synthesizers” were employed in the studio, as the Canadian post-punks explored themes of “identity, connection, survival in a precarious world.”
Our first taste of Room comes with lead single “These 3 Things” and its corresponding music video, which features mannequins and a host of random objects like leaf blowers and a dirt bike. Directors Jonny Look (Grizzly Bear, Cloud Nothings) and Scottie Cameron talked about the visual in a statement:
“Life can be problematic. Everything takes time and energy. We challenged ourselves to create devices of great inconvenience using three items. When initially testing the convenience machines without the human variable, we discovered luxury and success. However, it was sterile. The beauty only came with the unpredictable moments brought by the human element. Being human is better than looking for an easy way out.”
“If post-punk speaks the language of disaffection, then don’t call Ought a post-punk band. It’s easy to listen to Tim Darcy’s wry vocal inflection and find cynicism in it, but Ought’s music swallows angst and spits it back out in the form of life-affirming songs. They seek to inspire with “Sun Coming Down” its an impulsive, interpretive ode to existence that, on particularly bad days, reminds me of all that I have left under this big, beautiful, blue sky
Ought Known the value of a song’s lyrics, David Byrne once said, “In a certain way, it’s the sound of the words—the inflection and the way it’s sung and the way it fits the melody and the way the syllables are on the tongue—that has as much of the meaning as the actual, literal words.” It seems Ought’s Tim Darcy takes a cue from this emphasis on lyrical delivery over lyrical content in the Montreal-based, post-punk band’s newest single “Men for Miles”. It’s the second track off their sophomore LP Sun Coming Down on Constellation Records
As you listen to the song’s frantic energy unfurl, you get a sense that Darcy is someone who lives in his own head most of the time. He proposes anarchy (“bringing this whole fucker down”) only to follow it up with clinical logic and rationality (“It came with instructions / It’s neither here nor there”). Over a heaping layer of rhythmic guitars and drums, he asks with a combination of paranoia and distrust, “What did you see? / What did I see?” In “Men For Miles”, the mental cage breaks open and unleashes an anxiety-ridden stream of consciousness that makes more sense and feels more potent in listening to the idiosyncratic tone in voice than it ever would on paper.
It’s been a long seven years since Montreal’sWolf Parade released a full-length, having gone AWOL in 2011 after the release of their third full-length, Expo 86, the year before. Whatever may have transpired in the intervening years for the four-piece—who reunited in 2016 for a series of shows and an EP—it seems to have done them a hell of a lot of good. Co-frontmen Spencer Krug and Dan Boeckner lead the charge of these eleven songs with a renewed confidence and spark. Mixing futuristic electronics with good old fashioned rock and roll riffs, the pair—with drummer Arlen Thompson and guitarist Dante DeCaro in tow—trade their only slightly dissimilar voices and styles with each other to create, thankfully, a record very much worth the wait.
Proving their sense of humor is still intact after all these years, Wolf Parade kick off their rebirth with an apocalyptic song called “Lazarus Online.” Yet while the lyrics and the title recast the biblical character in a modern day setting of e-mails and online existence, the gloomy, piano-laced song itself treats the idea of death—and mourning—with the reverence and beauty it deserves. It’s about as strong a beginning as possible—perhaps one of the best songs of their career to date—and the pace picks up from there.
The jittery nerves of “You’re Dreaming,” the somber yet playful stadium-esque rock of “Baby Blue,” and the catchy melancholy and surreal nostalgia of “Am I An Alien Here”—which at times summons the spirit of the late David Bowie in a wondrous flourish of space-age morbidity—can stake claims to be near the top of the band’s repertoire. Similarly, “Artificial Life” and “King of Piss and Paper” end the album with a highly dramatic one-two punch of emotion that recalls exactly why this band were so revered to begin with and why their hiatus was such a loss. Only the Doors-esque “Who Are Ya” falls short of the expectations, its whimsical ’60s-style posturing feeling more like an insincere tribute than an actual Wolf Parade song.
It’s a small misgiving, however, and one that can be easily forgiven in the context of what surrounds it. Because this is a truly triumphant return, an ominous soundtrack to an Armageddon that seems to be getting closer with every damn day. Hopefully, we’ll have a bit more time to soak this up, revelling in the damage we’ve all done to ourselves before we all flicker, fade, and then explode in one final blast of nuclear regret that not even Lazarus would be able to return from. Make the most of it while you can.
Directed by Jonny Look and Scottie Cameron, Montreal post-punks Ought share the lead single from their forthcoming ‘Room Inside The World’ album, due out on February 16th 2018 via Merge Records.
This album has a whole mess of love and care and fire in it. We put a lot into this one and hope you enjoy it. Like our other records there are many sound-worlds and layers to peel back and we look forward to sharing them all with you. Today, start with “These 3 Things”, a dance track with lyrics about forgetting the ills of the world for a moment and finding communion in sweat, in short.
Watch the clip above to ‘These 3 Things’ which features some surreal scenes with a mannequin.
Ought are:
Tim Darcy: voice and guitar Tim Keen: drums, viola, vibraphone, and synth Matt May: keys, guitar, and synth Ben Stidworthy: bass
Nicolas Vernhes: guitar, keys, and noise box
James Goddard: saxophone
Eamon Quinn: clarinet
Choir Choir Choir: additional vocals on “Desire”
New album Playing House may only hint at the full scope of Brigitte Naggar’s talents. The Montréal musician known as Common Holly counts few common threads from song to song besides her mesmerizing voice and distinct sensibility. Album closer “New Bed” amounts to little more than that (and that’s all it needs), while on opener “If After All,” acoustic guitar and orchestral accompaniment give way to booming drums and gnarly alt-rock power chords. Her array of cinematic ballads make diverse use of minimal arrangements, venturing into chamber-pop, country, post-rock, and other styles in service of compelling narration about a romantic relationship falling apart. (From the title track: “I’ll play mama, you’ll play daddy, and we’ll ruin us beyond repair.”) Ultimately it’s a singer-songwriter album that plays with an auteur’s vision, one that suggests Naggar’s horizons are broad.
Friends, we’ve been quietly anticipating this latest announcement for what feels like forever. Its with great appreciation for you and your support that we offer up the third release from our upcoming album, the title track, Queens of the Breakers, It’s a song about the friendships of our past, some of which have fallen away, some of which have endured, all of which have marked us deeply, often in ways we still can’t fathom.
A great lesson in acceptance….It was one of the first tracks we demo’ed for this album in early 2016. It felt immediately great, and we were all galvanized. Over the coming months, though, we began to question it, and doubt it, and wonder if it couldn’t be better. We tried it again and again in several different studios, never feeling quite satisfied….On the verge of throwing our hands up, we decided to trust in that inspiration we felt at the beginning and put that earliest version on the album. So here it is. Engineered by Graham Lessard at Wild Studios in Saint-Zenon Quebec, mixed by Marcus Paquin….(dig Sarah’s unique harp bending technique!)….Queens of the Breakers
The Barr Brothers ‘Queens of the Breakers’ out October 13th,
“On all the other records, I’d pretty much written all the songs by myself, either in a bedroom or down in the studio. But, this time, we decided to try something different,” Brad Barr muses while tracing the creation of Queens of the Breakers, the third full-length record from The Barr Brothers. The Montreal-based singer/ guitarist explains that—along with his drumming sibling Andrew and harpist Sarah Page—on this album, they “decided to go off and see how we play together. It had been over seven years, and we decided to check back in with the three of us to see how we’d play together without any songs, to see if we can develop the music out of that. In the past, Andrew and Sarah and whoever else was in the band would tailor their approach to what the song called for, crafting their parts around a song that I wrote with a lot of room to be as impressionistic as they wanted to be. But this time, we wanted to develop the music out of that kind of playing instead of the inverse.”
DEFIBRILLATION (FEAT. LUCIUS)
This was the last song to be conceived, written and recorded for the album. Andrew’s opening drum beat was the impetus for the tune. Our mother had a small, not-really-consequential fall, but she needed stitches in her head. He went to the emergency room with her at 1 a.m., and overheard two EKG machines pulsing. They were lining up and then going out of sync, and then lining up. I assume that they were monitoring two patients on the wing. When we got back to Montreal, he was like, “I’m gonna try and make a beat based off of that.” He emailed that beat to me—we’d already started mixing the record— and I pinned the song on top of it really quickly. Then, we got the Lucius girls to sing the bridge and they just sent the song to the next level. It was the last tune to come to us and probably the one we spent the least amount of time laboring over.
LOOK BEFORE IT CHANGES
I wrote this one while I was working on a six-string ukulele that I brought with me to Mexico in the winter of 2015. Then, it all came together during our first session for the record. We went to this cabin in the woods of Northern Quebec and we were doing these improvisations and just trying things out. When we took a break, I tracked that little song just as is. For the first take, I sang and played the ukulele. The next time we took a break, Andrew went in and did a drum pass on it—pretty much just cymbals. And then, during the next break, we recorded Sarah.
We felt that we should just build this little song off on the side while we were writing the songs that were gonna be on our record. And it ended up being an easy and delightful experience. It feels really good and it reminds me of Lhasa de Sela, one of our friends from Montreal. She was an icon up here. Her voice was something just totally otherworldly and influential on all of us. Her band was The Barr Brothers band, minus me. She had Andrew on drums, Sarah on harp, our first bass player Miles [Perkin] and Joe Grass, who plays pedal steel with us. And then she got cancer in 2009, and she passed away on New Year’s Day 2010.
SONG THAT I HEARD
I started the song on the same beach in Mexico at the same time as “Look Before It Changes.” I knew it was exactly the kind of song I wanted to deliver, but it took me a while. I tried to shake that lyric “song that I heard” for a long time. I thought it was kind of corny: “Already changed by the song that I heard/ already claimed by the song that I heard.” I felt a little embarrassed by that lyric and finally I just gave over to it and started riffing around it. Once I accepted that one line, the rest of the song came into place.
I reference the Great Antonio, who was a strongman back in the ‘40s–‘60s when you had these strongmen at carnivals. He dragged four city buses filled with people and also a train. He ended up living in Montreal on the streets [after growing up in Yugoslavia]— he had huge dreadlocks. He had this sign, which said: “I will pick up your family for money!” He’s an icon here and an early symbol of the city, but he is relatively unknown outside of here.
MAYBE SOMEDAY
This is the only cover on the record. It’s a Nathan Moore song that was recorded by Surprise Me Mr. Davis. [The group features Moore, the Barrs, their Slip bandmate Marc Friedman and Marco Benevento.] We improvised on it at the cabin. Sarah came up with the guitar riffs—that’s her on guitar.
It’s the only recording I’ve ever made or released where I’m not playing guitar. Andrew championed that. It reminded us of funk music from the ‘70s. It’s a really innocent, naïve spin on what’s funky with Sarah riffing on the guitar. Funk is not really in her musical vocabulary, but she came up with this oblong, crazy little riff that Andrew pushed forward. Then, we tried putting “Maybe Someday” on top of that, and it worked. It’s fun for me to sing it, trying to invoke Hugh Mundell, who’s an early ska, rocksteady singer—a Studio One guy—and a little bit of Elvis Costello.
KOMPROMAT
That one came out of a really true improv with Andrew at the cabin in Northern Quebec. It was just us jamming together, feeling really loose, feeling really free and having that sort of main riff come out. Andrew discovered the word “kompromat.” [The word refers to compromising material used to injure the reputation of a public figure—the term gained notoriety in reference to the dossier that purported to chronicle Donald Trump’s transgressions in Russia.]
The song had been taking a more political/social critique format that Dylan called a “finger-pointing song.” For me, that was what the song seemed to call for lyrically and, when Andrew heard my first verses, he said, “Do you think you could find some way to fit in kompromat?” I said, “I don’t think I can fit the word kompromat in there but I can just name the song ‘Kompromat.’” So that’s what we did. I’ve made some pretty feeble, awful stabs at writing more social commentary-type songs in the past. This is the first one where I at least did it in a more graceful way that I could live with in the future.
YOU WOULD HAVE TO LOSE YOUR MIND
I came up with the chord pattern, rhythmic pattern and melody [for this song] during the end of the Sleeping Operator sessions. I thought about putting it on Sleeping Operator at the time, but I was spent lyrically—or I just couldn’t figure out what I wanted to sing about. So one of the first things we did when we started improvising for this record was say, “Let’s check out this thing; let’s see what it feels like.”
The version that’s on the record was directly from the cabin. We tried to recreate it in another studio here in Montreal and weren’t really successful, in our minds, at beating whatever we got out in the woods. Something about the openness of the room, the feeling of having the water right next to us—the cabin was very remote, about 30 minutes from the nearest market and right next to a lake. So the consistency of water just sort of seemed to permeate those recordings, and that’s what I feel when I listen to the song.
QUEENS OF THE BREAKERS
We had a breakthrough with this: We recorded an acoustic version in the cabin and then, once we got a take we liked, we went in and overdubbed a full electric band on top of the acoustic band. It just knocked us out. We were really excited with what happened, and it became our guiding song. We felt that way for about a month and then we started second-guessing it, thinking, “Maybe this doesn’t sound like us. Maybe it’s somebody else’s song. Maybe it sounds too much like this other band. It doesn’t feel like The Barr Brothers.”
We tried it almost a dozen different times in several different studios over a year. One of the sessions has 60 drum patterns—we just muted the drums to let Andrew try different patterns. In the end, we said, “Let’s just use the original one. It has something that made us really happy. And to hell with it—let’s just ride that feeling.”
I still feel great about it, but it has been one of the trickiest tunes for us to own. Maybe that’s because it’s one of the more straightforward rock-and-roll songs that we’ve ever tried to record. There’s no big left turns in it, there’s nothing idiosyncratic or eccentric about it, but it was very refreshing to play and it sounded easy and fun.
Lyrically, “Queens of the Breakers” is a reference to my old gang of friends—those early teenage friends who, at 13, 14, 15, you first smoked weed with and went to your first Grateful Dead shows with and started really getting into music with on a more cerebral level. We used to do weird shit like dressing up in my friend’s mother’s clothing, which were loud, colorful dresses. We’d raid her closet, put her dresses on, and sort of maraud in Providence—like go to restaurants and just sit down. I remember, one time, we went to The Breakers Mansion in Newport, R.I., dressed in his mother’s clothing, and took a tour of the place. I was thinking about those guys and those times, and I dubbed us Queens of the Breakers almost 30 years later.
IT CAME TO ME
This one began as an afterthought. Sarah had gone to bed, and Andrew and I were playing really loud at the end of the day. It was probably 2 or 3 a.m., and we just started rocking out. The lyrics came quickly, which is what I always look for when coming up with stuff. The best possible scenario for me is that a lyric hits at the same time as the music, and that gives me something I can work with. Otherwise, if I just have the music, I’m fishing for a long time.
It all came easily, but I never thought it would be one that The Barr Brothers would use. I couldn’t imagine how Sarah was gonna treat that one. It felt a little bit too abrasive for what I assumed she would be willing to put up with, volume-wise. But she jumped all over it. She really dove in.
That’s another thing I want to say about this record—Sarah took a huge leap forward from Sleeping Operator. There’s some ambient stuff you hear that almost sounds like synthesizers or trippy guitar and a lot of that is the harp. She went deep with the sonic possibilities of the harp and emerged with a setup that allowed her to be a lot louder and sustain her sound—that was the big thing because the harp dies out quickly. She made a lot of discoveries, and I would say she’s the MVP of the record. It’s been her personal mission to open up the possibilities for the harp.
HIDEOUS GLORIOUS
On “Hideous Glorious,” we used the same approach as “Queens of the Breakers”—we recorded as an acoustic band and then overdubbed as an electric band. It’s one of those tunes that felt good, but I also thought that, if we were going to leave a song off the record because the record felt too long, this probably would have been the first one we’d cut. It sits in a funny place. It’s at odds with what I had thought made The Barr Brothers a unique band—it’s got that meat-and-potatoes, rock-and-roll thing—but it’s another one that feels really good to play. It’s got an openness to it. I love the drum sounds on it, the parts are all well laid out and it just kind of fell together. It was another one where I was like, “Well, OK, we can play more anthemic, epic rock-and-roll that I thought was maybe off-limits to us.”
READY FOR WAR
“Ready for War” is another one I’d been kicking around for at least five years. I’d given up on it ever being on a record, or even just being finished compositionally. There was a point in [making] this record where Andrew felt it needed “one of those heart songs.” We had “Queens of the Breakers,” “Kompromat” and “Maybe Someday,” and these things that were either a bit more rocking or a bit more mysterious, but he felt we were missing that “heart song.” Then he was like, “What about that song you’ve been writing for a little while called ‘Ready for War?’ What do you think about that?”
So I took it back to the drawing board and penned it out. I felt like there was still a lot to be discovered in this song, and then we came up with this cool little time shift. The entrance of the drums felt kind of undeniable to us as a moment. And lyrically, it was really impressionistic for me. It was way less concrete than anything else on the record and I’m OK with that. I like having a couple of those songs on the record, where I listen a few years down the road and I’m like, “Oh, maybe that’s what this one is about.” It’s something open-ended to discover later.
Montreal powerpunks The Nils released their debut album in 1987 along with The Replacements’ “Pleased To Meet Me“, both records were essential power pop listening that year. As debut records go The Nils album was flawless, with no throwaway tracks and quite a few classic songs, it was critically acclaimed upon its release on Profile Records. But in the midst of the North American leg of their tour, Profile went bankrupt, the tour was cancelled and The Nils were thrown into limbo.
The Replacements of course cemented their legendary status with “Pleased To Meet Me“, while The Nils, well the road to fame is paved with bands that should have been big .
Five years later they were finally legally able to continue as The Nils, but pretty much all the momentum had been stolen from them and grunge had taken over the world. They released a compilation in 1994 and an EP (as Chino) in 1999 before reforming as The Nils in 2002 and working on new material. Sadly in 2004 singer/guitarist Alex Soria ended his life at 39 years.
In the end The Nils legacy remains strong, particularly because artists like Superchunk, Goo Goo Dolls and Bob Mould would state the Nils influence on their respective sounds. Now, for its 30th anniversary the debut is getting the royal treatment from Canadian vinyl purveyors Label Obscura who are releasing a deluxe remastered LP, available on vinyl for the first time in decades. a gatefold sleeve with archival photos, and liner notes by Jack Rabid, editor of New York’s influential music zine The Big Takeover.