Posts Tagged ‘The Weakerthans’

If ever a lyric summed up an entire album then these  words, taken from the title-track from John K Samson’s new solo album, is it. First there’s the brooding, philosophising of time and place and our role within it:

“And no one knows we’re anywhere we’re not supposed to be, so stay awhile and watch the wind throw patterns on a field. ”

such a staple of Samson’s work with The Weakerthans – then there’s the nod to his surrounding environment, and the wheat crop that so inspired this new album; one that hides throughout the winter only to thrive again when the warmer weather arrives.

Also diverting from these two somewhat vague arms to take in tales of drug treatment centres, technologies advancement on our daily lives, psychotic episodes at local quiz nights, and even the return of his feline character, Virtute, who dropped in and out of The Weakerthans back-catalogue, ‘Winter Wheat’ is a poignant, beautiful, and wonderfully compelling album, resonant and warm magnification of what’s often overlooked, so rich in detail it feels like entering the world of some great novel; vivid, detailed, and one that stays with you for far longer than the running time.

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All lyrics and songs C 2016 by John K. Samson,
except 17th Street Treatment Centre and VPW 13 Blues,
C 2016 by Christine Fellows and John K. Samson

Popular music often celebrates the workaday lives of everyday underdogs. But for  John K Samson of the pop-punk band The Weakerthans , those strivers form an unusual mix of bottled-up academics, forlorn cat owners and underappreciated quizmasters — folks whose academic pursuits and lively minds don’t take them nearly as far as they might have expected. Samson sings with an agreeable, approachable purr throughout Winter Wheat, which closes with a perfect 97-second tearjerker in “Virtute At Rest.”

The highly anticipated new album by renowned singer-songwriter John K. Samson entitled Winter Wheat has arrived! Inspired by the search for connection and community, and our individual and collective struggles with addictions to drugs, screens, and fossil fuels,Winter Wheat is a sprawling, masterful and timely work by a writer at the peak of his powers. “Singer/songwriter John K. Samson enlists the rhythm section from his renowned band The Weakerthans for much of his second solo album,

“Postdoc Blues” by John K. Samson from the album ‘Winter Wheat,’ available now