--taken from: Huffington Post (read more here)
by Aaron Brophy
"We go way back with those guys. I think they're one year older than Jay, Darcy and I. From Mississauga. I think they formed when they were 14. They were called Pezz forever. We played a bunch of community centre shows with them," says Small. "I can remember was we were playing a show opening for Sloan at Sheridan College and it would have been right around the time that Between The Bridges came out... Ben [Kowalewicz, Billy Talent's singer] was at that show and saying things like 'I can't believe you got to open for Sloan.' That's amazing. It felt to him at that time it was a fantastic achievement. It felt that way for us, too."
--taken from: Huffington Post (read more here)
How to Use This Site
Looking for:
...a certain article or performance? Type keywords in the search bar....an old @Sloanmusic tweet? Check the Twitter Archive pages sorted by year.
...pretty much anything Sloan-related? Feel free to browse the site!
Friday, December 12, 2014
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Bowery Ballroom / New York, New York
--taken from: Elmore Magazine
by Layne Montgomery
With more than twenty years of experience under their belt, Sloan is an impeccable live act. It was my third or fourth time seeing one of my all-time favorite bands, and they continue to exceed my expectations (besides continually refusing to bust out my favorite song “She Says What She Means.”)
Billed as “An Evening With Sloan,” the band essentially opened for themselves with a short set where each member of the four piece band took center stage for three songs (excluding drummer Andrew Scott, whose nearly twenty-minute “Forty-Eight Portraits” counted for his whole set). This individual spotlighting follows the model of their new record, Commonwealth, where every member, each one a talented songwriter, had a full side of the LP to do whatever they pleased. While the record is definitely good, most new songs were met with a polite disinterest from the crowd, who perked up more during the second set, which was longer and more hit filled. Strangely, the band played nothing from their classic ’90s LP, One Chord to Another, but perhaps that’s because the record is overdue for a deluxe reissue and tour like they did a few years ago for another masterpiece record of theirs, Twice Removed. Minor set list gripes aside, an encore featuring a tender “The Marquee and the Moon,” complete with a twinkling disco-ball above them, and a powerful version of their early single “500 Up” was a moment for the books, which left me leaving the Bowery with a smile on my face.
--taken from: Elmore Magazine
by Layne Montgomery
With more than twenty years of experience under their belt, Sloan is an impeccable live act. It was my third or fourth time seeing one of my all-time favorite bands, and they continue to exceed my expectations (besides continually refusing to bust out my favorite song “She Says What She Means.”)
Billed as “An Evening With Sloan,” the band essentially opened for themselves with a short set where each member of the four piece band took center stage for three songs (excluding drummer Andrew Scott, whose nearly twenty-minute “Forty-Eight Portraits” counted for his whole set). This individual spotlighting follows the model of their new record, Commonwealth, where every member, each one a talented songwriter, had a full side of the LP to do whatever they pleased. While the record is definitely good, most new songs were met with a polite disinterest from the crowd, who perked up more during the second set, which was longer and more hit filled. Strangely, the band played nothing from their classic ’90s LP, One Chord to Another, but perhaps that’s because the record is overdue for a deluxe reissue and tour like they did a few years ago for another masterpiece record of theirs, Twice Removed. Minor set list gripes aside, an encore featuring a tender “The Marquee and the Moon,” complete with a twinkling disco-ball above them, and a powerful version of their early single “500 Up” was a moment for the books, which left me leaving the Bowery with a smile on my face.
--taken from: Elmore Magazine
Monday, December 8, 2014
Fruitcake – Will It Last Forever?
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Sloan returns to New Glasgow
--taken from: New Glasgow News
NEW GLASGOW - Canadian rock and roll icons, Sloan, are returning to New Glasgow in 2015. The Nova Scotia pop pioneers, now based in Toronto, released their 11th album, Commonwealth, in September, and bring their latest tracks to Glasgow Square on March 4.
“Their influence on the music scene in Nova Scotia can still be felt today, 22 years after their first record,” says Carlton Munroe, New Glasgow’s Programs and Events Manager. “Commonwealth once again reaffirms Sloan’s place in the top drawer of Canadian rock and roll, and we’re very excited to have them return to the Glasgow Square stage.”
Each member of the group - Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland, and Andrew Scott - all contribute original compositions to each record, equal partners with equal say over every aspect of their work. Where in the past creative lines have been blurred to create the multifaceted Sloan sound, Commonwealth sees the four bandmates disassociating ever so slightly to create an old-school double album sequenced with each member staking out a single side as their own artistic dominion.
Commonwealth follows 2011’s The Double Cross, which earned Sloan some of the most glowing notices of their acclaimed career.
Pitchfork summed it up best: “Twenty years in, they’ve made one of their best albums…That (Sloan) sound this creatively fresh this deep into their career is a real treat for people who’ve stuck with them through the years. If you’ve never given them a chance before, this is a great time to get to know them.”
--taken from: New Glasgow News
NEW GLASGOW - Canadian rock and roll icons, Sloan, are returning to New Glasgow in 2015. The Nova Scotia pop pioneers, now based in Toronto, released their 11th album, Commonwealth, in September, and bring their latest tracks to Glasgow Square on March 4.
“Their influence on the music scene in Nova Scotia can still be felt today, 22 years after their first record,” says Carlton Munroe, New Glasgow’s Programs and Events Manager. “Commonwealth once again reaffirms Sloan’s place in the top drawer of Canadian rock and roll, and we’re very excited to have them return to the Glasgow Square stage.”
Each member of the group - Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland, and Andrew Scott - all contribute original compositions to each record, equal partners with equal say over every aspect of their work. Where in the past creative lines have been blurred to create the multifaceted Sloan sound, Commonwealth sees the four bandmates disassociating ever so slightly to create an old-school double album sequenced with each member staking out a single side as their own artistic dominion.
Commonwealth follows 2011’s The Double Cross, which earned Sloan some of the most glowing notices of their acclaimed career.
Pitchfork summed it up best: “Twenty years in, they’ve made one of their best albums…That (Sloan) sound this creatively fresh this deep into their career is a real treat for people who’ve stuck with them through the years. If you’ve never given them a chance before, this is a great time to get to know them.”
--taken from: New Glasgow News
Proudly Canadian: Sloan
--taken from: Cashbox Magazine Canada
Sloan is a Canadian, Toronto-based rock/power pop quartet, from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Throughout their 20+ year tenure, Sloan has released 11LPs, two EPs, a live album, a Greatest hits album and more than thirtysingles. The band has received nine Juno Award nominations, winning one. The band is known for their sharing of songwriting from each member of the group and their unaltered line-up throughout their career.
Sloan was formed in 1991 when Chris Murphy and Andrew Scott met at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) in Halifax; Patrick Pentland and Jay Ferguson joined soon after. According to Sloan's official website, the band is named after the nickname of their friend, Jason Larsen. Larsen was originally called Slow One by his French-speaking boss which, with the French accent, sounded more like "Sloan". The original agreement was that they could name the band after Larsen as long as he was on the cover of their first album. As a result, it is Larsen who appears on the cover of the Peppermint EP, which was released on the band's own label, Murderecords.
Later in 1992, Sloan released their full-length album Smeared on Geffen Records. In 1994 Geffen did not promote their second album, Twice Removed, due to artistic disputes, although it sold well in Canada. Spin named it one of the "Best Albums You Didn't Hear" in 1994. A 1996 reader poll by Canadian music magazine Chart! ranked it as the best Canadian album of all time, only two years after its release. The same poll in 2000 ranked the album third, behind Joni Mitchell's Blue and Neil Young's Harvest. However, the 2005 poll once again ranked the album first.
After the release of Twice Removed, the band went on hiatus and were rumoured to have broken up, as they had rejected Geffen's offer for their next album. In 1996, however, they released the widely praised One Chord to Another on their own Murderecords label. Following 1998's Navy Blues album, Sloan released their first live album 4 Nights at the Palais Royale in 1999. Those albums were followed by Between the Bridges in 1999, and Pretty Together in 2001.
Sloan made a concerted effort to break into the US market on their 2003 release Action Pact. Songs were recorded in L.A. with Tom Rothrock producing. The glossier, radio-ready sound failed to raise Sloan's profile in the US, though they continued to be highly popular in Canada. Sloan's first compilation album A Sides Win: Singles 1992-2005, included two new songs, "All Used Up" and "Try to Make It". The Japanese release included two additional new tracks.
Now signed to Yep Roc Records for their US releases, they put out their eighth disc, Never Hear the End of It in 2006. The album contained 30 tracks with all the members of the band contributing new songs. It was met with widespread critical acclaim and became the highest charting Sloan album in the US up to that point. In 2008, Sloan followed up their longest album with their shortest release, Parallel Play.
In November 2009 Sloan added a digital music store to their website. The band released an online-only EP called Hit & Run to promote the store. The EP featured two songs by Chris Murphy, and one by each of the other band members. Murphy's Take It Upon Yourself was released as a free single. In February 2010, the band released another online exclusive, the compilation album B-Sides Win: Extras, Bonus Tracks and B-Sides 1992 – 2008.
Sloan announced plans to release a 10th album in 2011, to coincide with the 20th anniversary of their first show. On February 22, 2011, Sloan announced that their new album would be released on May 10, 2011. The album, entitledThe Double Cross, is a nod to their 20th (or XX) anniversary. The album is preceded by the first single, "Unkind".
With the release of The Double Cross, Sloan has now released a catalogue of around 175 different songs.
In promotion of the new album, a special video series produced and directed by Catherine Stockhausen has been launched on YouTube to commemorate the illustrious success of the band. Interviewed in these videos are several musicians and celebrities such as Jason Schwartzman, Joel Plaskett, Stefan Brogren, Dave Foley, Kevin Drew, Buck 65, Sebastien Grainger, The Dears, Ian D'Sa and Benjamin Kowalewicz from Billy Talent, K-OS, and Dave Hamlin. Following the completion of touring for The Double Cross, Sloan reissued and toured behind Twice Removed as a three-record vinyl box set containing the original album, rarities, and demos.
On April 24, 2013, Sloan announced the release of a hardcore punk single, Jenny b/w It's In You, It's In Me. With it comes a digital download of a hardcore covers album, as well as a T-shirt portraying the band members circa 1985. In 2013, the band revealed plans for a double album, with each of the four sides featuring a solo suite by a different band member. In May 2014, it was announced that the new album would be titled Commonwealth and would be released in September 2014. On July 14, 2014, the band announced the official release date for the album (September 9, which turned out to be accurate) and the release of the album's first single, "Keep Swinging (Downtown)".
--taken from: Cashbox Magazine Canada
Sloan is a Canadian, Toronto-based rock/power pop quartet, from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Throughout their 20+ year tenure, Sloan has released 11LPs, two EPs, a live album, a Greatest hits album and more than thirtysingles. The band has received nine Juno Award nominations, winning one. The band is known for their sharing of songwriting from each member of the group and their unaltered line-up throughout their career.
Sloan was formed in 1991 when Chris Murphy and Andrew Scott met at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) in Halifax; Patrick Pentland and Jay Ferguson joined soon after. According to Sloan's official website, the band is named after the nickname of their friend, Jason Larsen. Larsen was originally called Slow One by his French-speaking boss which, with the French accent, sounded more like "Sloan". The original agreement was that they could name the band after Larsen as long as he was on the cover of their first album. As a result, it is Larsen who appears on the cover of the Peppermint EP, which was released on the band's own label, Murderecords.
Later in 1992, Sloan released their full-length album Smeared on Geffen Records. In 1994 Geffen did not promote their second album, Twice Removed, due to artistic disputes, although it sold well in Canada. Spin named it one of the "Best Albums You Didn't Hear" in 1994. A 1996 reader poll by Canadian music magazine Chart! ranked it as the best Canadian album of all time, only two years after its release. The same poll in 2000 ranked the album third, behind Joni Mitchell's Blue and Neil Young's Harvest. However, the 2005 poll once again ranked the album first.
After the release of Twice Removed, the band went on hiatus and were rumoured to have broken up, as they had rejected Geffen's offer for their next album. In 1996, however, they released the widely praised One Chord to Another on their own Murderecords label. Following 1998's Navy Blues album, Sloan released their first live album 4 Nights at the Palais Royale in 1999. Those albums were followed by Between the Bridges in 1999, and Pretty Together in 2001.
Sloan made a concerted effort to break into the US market on their 2003 release Action Pact. Songs were recorded in L.A. with Tom Rothrock producing. The glossier, radio-ready sound failed to raise Sloan's profile in the US, though they continued to be highly popular in Canada. Sloan's first compilation album A Sides Win: Singles 1992-2005, included two new songs, "All Used Up" and "Try to Make It". The Japanese release included two additional new tracks.
Now signed to Yep Roc Records for their US releases, they put out their eighth disc, Never Hear the End of It in 2006. The album contained 30 tracks with all the members of the band contributing new songs. It was met with widespread critical acclaim and became the highest charting Sloan album in the US up to that point. In 2008, Sloan followed up their longest album with their shortest release, Parallel Play.
In November 2009 Sloan added a digital music store to their website. The band released an online-only EP called Hit & Run to promote the store. The EP featured two songs by Chris Murphy, and one by each of the other band members. Murphy's Take It Upon Yourself was released as a free single. In February 2010, the band released another online exclusive, the compilation album B-Sides Win: Extras, Bonus Tracks and B-Sides 1992 – 2008.
Sloan announced plans to release a 10th album in 2011, to coincide with the 20th anniversary of their first show. On February 22, 2011, Sloan announced that their new album would be released on May 10, 2011. The album, entitledThe Double Cross, is a nod to their 20th (or XX) anniversary. The album is preceded by the first single, "Unkind".
With the release of The Double Cross, Sloan has now released a catalogue of around 175 different songs.
In promotion of the new album, a special video series produced and directed by Catherine Stockhausen has been launched on YouTube to commemorate the illustrious success of the band. Interviewed in these videos are several musicians and celebrities such as Jason Schwartzman, Joel Plaskett, Stefan Brogren, Dave Foley, Kevin Drew, Buck 65, Sebastien Grainger, The Dears, Ian D'Sa and Benjamin Kowalewicz from Billy Talent, K-OS, and Dave Hamlin. Following the completion of touring for The Double Cross, Sloan reissued and toured behind Twice Removed as a three-record vinyl box set containing the original album, rarities, and demos.
On April 24, 2013, Sloan announced the release of a hardcore punk single, Jenny b/w It's In You, It's In Me. With it comes a digital download of a hardcore covers album, as well as a T-shirt portraying the band members circa 1985. In 2013, the band revealed plans for a double album, with each of the four sides featuring a solo suite by a different band member. In May 2014, it was announced that the new album would be titled Commonwealth and would be released in September 2014. On July 14, 2014, the band announced the official release date for the album (September 9, which turned out to be accurate) and the release of the album's first single, "Keep Swinging (Downtown)".
--taken from: Cashbox Magazine Canada
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Sloan to play Halifax’s Marquee March 7
--taken from: The Chronicle Herald
Sloan plays the Marquee Ballroom in Halifax on March 7, the band's first hometown show since the release of its 11th album, the double LP Commonwealth. (TIM McCREADY)
Canadian pop rock quartet Sloan returns to its hometown to play its first Halifax show since 2011 at the Marquee Ballroom on Sat., March 7.
The show comes after extensive touring in Canada and the U.S. for its latest album, Commonwealth, released on Sept. 9.
The double record, the band’s 11th collection of all-new material, was preceded by the single Keep Swinging (Downtown) and is unique in the way it divides up the songwriting duties with each member — Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland and Andrew Scott — taking a side each over the two-LP set.
--taken from: The Chronicle Herald
Sloan plays the Marquee Ballroom in Halifax on March 7, the band's first hometown show since the release of its 11th album, the double LP Commonwealth. (TIM McCREADY)
Canadian pop rock quartet Sloan returns to its hometown to play its first Halifax show since 2011 at the Marquee Ballroom on Sat., March 7.
The show comes after extensive touring in Canada and the U.S. for its latest album, Commonwealth, released on Sept. 9.
The double record, the band’s 11th collection of all-new material, was preceded by the single Keep Swinging (Downtown) and is unique in the way it divides up the songwriting duties with each member — Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland and Andrew Scott — taking a side each over the two-LP set.
--taken from: The Chronicle Herald
Friday, November 21, 2014
Catch your Sloan snow date Wednesday at Music Hall
--taken from: The London Free Press
by James Reaney
Despite the snow, Sloan still gets to rock downtown London in November.
The Canadian rock band is now to play the London Music Hall on Wednesday, promoters announced on social media this week.
Sloan was to play earlier this week at the venue before weather and other issues postponed the event.
“Due to weather and mechanical issues . . . (the) Sloan show will be postponed,” SummerCamp Productions said on Facebook this week, apologizing for the switch.
“All tickets will be honoured for next Wednesday’s show. If you are unable to make it, you may request a refund at the place of ticket purchase,” the statement said.
Touring to support its 11th studio release, Commonwealth, Sloan has turned the band’s long-standing democratic songwriting philosophy into individual realities.
Each of its four members has his own side of the double disc titled after playing card suit names like Diamond (singer-rhythm guitarist Jay Ferguson), Heart (singer-bassist Chris Murphy), Shamrock (singer-lead guitarist Patrick Pentland) and Spade (singer-drummer Andrew Scott).
--taken from: The London Free Press
by James Reaney
Despite the snow, Sloan still gets to rock downtown London in November.
The Canadian rock band is now to play the London Music Hall on Wednesday, promoters announced on social media this week.
Sloan was to play earlier this week at the venue before weather and other issues postponed the event.
“Due to weather and mechanical issues . . . (the) Sloan show will be postponed,” SummerCamp Productions said on Facebook this week, apologizing for the switch.
“All tickets will be honoured for next Wednesday’s show. If you are unable to make it, you may request a refund at the place of ticket purchase,” the statement said.
Touring to support its 11th studio release, Commonwealth, Sloan has turned the band’s long-standing democratic songwriting philosophy into individual realities.
Each of its four members has his own side of the double disc titled after playing card suit names like Diamond (singer-rhythm guitarist Jay Ferguson), Heart (singer-bassist Chris Murphy), Shamrock (singer-lead guitarist Patrick Pentland) and Spade (singer-drummer Andrew Scott).
--taken from: The London Free Press
Monday, November 17, 2014
Sloan makes the Back Room feel major
--taken from: Indy Week
by David Klein
I’d heard the odd record geek sing the praises of Sloan, but it was only two years ago, at the Yep Roc 15th anniversary show at the Cat's Cradle, that I fell for this Toronto-based quartet—hard. In the middle of a lineup of bands similarly indebted to 1960s Anglo pop, Sloan wowed the big room in an impassioned set with no skimping on the power part of the power pop equation. I’ve been poring over their immense catalog ever since—trying to figure out what took me so long.
Yet there’s a good reason why even passionate rock people are ignorant of Sloan: Despite 20 years of turning out smart, hooky songs, with everything from slamming indie rock with huge choruses to stripped-down garage stylings to immaculately constructed pop ear worms, Sloan is not a big name in these parts. In a recent visit to a local record shop, I found no Sloan vinyl and only dated CD copies of their records, promising online extras that are no longer available. When I inquired, the proprietor said he just doesn’t move a whole lot of Sloan. In Canada, it’s a different story. They play big halls and are widely revered, but here, on their own, the band is relegated to the 250-person capacity Cat’s Cradle Back Room. Their loss was our gain.
With four songwriters, all of whom sing and three of whom are multi-instrumentalists, Sloan is versatile to the extreme. Along with very few others (Moby Grape and Teenage Fanclub come to mind), Sloan has been able to make this talent-heavy configuration work. Two competing songwriting egos is more than enough to break up a band. Somehow Sloan not only to balances its profusion of talent but blends the disparate sensibilities into a vibrant whole.
While Sloan can play to a huge room, there was some welcome latitude in the intimate setting. The band played two sets, with no opener and liberties happily taken, starting with the first song. Song is really a loose term for “Forty-Eight Portraits”—which is not available as a single $1.00 download on iTunes, just as its inspiration, Side 2 of Abbey Road, isn’t. To be sure, this almost 18-minute suite written by drummer Andrew Scott, which closes Sloan’s latest, Commonwealth, seems an odd choice for an opening number. But it was Scott’s birthday, so there he was, leather-clad and looking like some unholy amalgam of Billy Boy in A Clockwork Orange and 1980s-era Julian Cope, playing guitar and leading the band through his complex creation, which takes its title from his interest in printmaking and painting. The band handled the shifting components with total panache, from tremulous psych-pop to a section sung on record by a children’s choir to a climactic “She’s So Heavy”-chord cycle. It was something of a feat, but there was no hint of strain.
Afterward, Scott took his place behind the drum set, and Chris Murphy, the ostensible frontman, put down the sticks he’d been bashing with Keith Moon-like flourishes, picked up his bass guitar and took his place at center stage. The first set concentrated on Commonwealth, a particularly egalitarian showcase in which each member wrote songs for one “side” of a traditional double record. These tracks are as engaging as any of the band’s great singles: Lead guitarist Patrick Pentland’s “Keep Swinging (Downtown),” Murphy’s “Carried Away,” with its bittersweet echoes of Fleetwood Mac, and the sweet-voiced Ferguson’s “You’ve Got a Lot On Your Mind” were given vibrant treatment. The set culminated in the stirring, waltz-time “Marquee and the Moon,” which nods to clubs where the band cut its teeth in its native Halifax.
The generous second set picked and chose from among Sloan’s 11 albums. Throughout, the band never wasted a note or lost cohesion, with Pentland adding stinging leads, Scott becoming a demon on the drums, Murphy accompanying himself with limber bass lines, and Ferguson, a bit enigmatic behind the bill of his cap, playing rhythm guitar and sounding like heaven every time he opened his mouth. Credit also goes to longtime keyboardist Gregory Macdonald, who added harmony vocals and even played some bass.
For an encore, Scott was back in front, with birthday privileges. After a ripping cover of the Descendents’ “Catalina,” the group paid tribute to the recently broken-up Guided By Voices, who had been scheduled to play the main space that night. The volume and fuzz went up a notch, and rousing takes on the less familiar “Some Drilling Implied” and “Tractor Rape Chain” followed. The latter became a sing-along for an audience that didn’t see anything odd about howling out the nonsensical title phrase as if it were the national anthem. Finally, the band launched into the perennial set-closing “Money City Maniacs,” which involves huge, Cheap Trick-reminiscent chords, lusty clapping of hands and a shout-along chorus that rhymes “The joke is” with “Coke fizz” to glorious effect.
Despite a few audience members conspicuously singing along to every single lyric, the garrulous and charming Murphy acknowledged that Sloan might be new to some and even thanked those who dragged their spouses with them. With their regular-guy personae and gale-force performance, it’s a sure bet that Sloan made a few more converts last night.
--taken from: Indy Week
by David Klein
I’d heard the odd record geek sing the praises of Sloan, but it was only two years ago, at the Yep Roc 15th anniversary show at the Cat's Cradle, that I fell for this Toronto-based quartet—hard. In the middle of a lineup of bands similarly indebted to 1960s Anglo pop, Sloan wowed the big room in an impassioned set with no skimping on the power part of the power pop equation. I’ve been poring over their immense catalog ever since—trying to figure out what took me so long.
Yet there’s a good reason why even passionate rock people are ignorant of Sloan: Despite 20 years of turning out smart, hooky songs, with everything from slamming indie rock with huge choruses to stripped-down garage stylings to immaculately constructed pop ear worms, Sloan is not a big name in these parts. In a recent visit to a local record shop, I found no Sloan vinyl and only dated CD copies of their records, promising online extras that are no longer available. When I inquired, the proprietor said he just doesn’t move a whole lot of Sloan. In Canada, it’s a different story. They play big halls and are widely revered, but here, on their own, the band is relegated to the 250-person capacity Cat’s Cradle Back Room. Their loss was our gain.
With four songwriters, all of whom sing and three of whom are multi-instrumentalists, Sloan is versatile to the extreme. Along with very few others (Moby Grape and Teenage Fanclub come to mind), Sloan has been able to make this talent-heavy configuration work. Two competing songwriting egos is more than enough to break up a band. Somehow Sloan not only to balances its profusion of talent but blends the disparate sensibilities into a vibrant whole.
While Sloan can play to a huge room, there was some welcome latitude in the intimate setting. The band played two sets, with no opener and liberties happily taken, starting with the first song. Song is really a loose term for “Forty-Eight Portraits”—which is not available as a single $1.00 download on iTunes, just as its inspiration, Side 2 of Abbey Road, isn’t. To be sure, this almost 18-minute suite written by drummer Andrew Scott, which closes Sloan’s latest, Commonwealth, seems an odd choice for an opening number. But it was Scott’s birthday, so there he was, leather-clad and looking like some unholy amalgam of Billy Boy in A Clockwork Orange and 1980s-era Julian Cope, playing guitar and leading the band through his complex creation, which takes its title from his interest in printmaking and painting. The band handled the shifting components with total panache, from tremulous psych-pop to a section sung on record by a children’s choir to a climactic “She’s So Heavy”-chord cycle. It was something of a feat, but there was no hint of strain.
Afterward, Scott took his place behind the drum set, and Chris Murphy, the ostensible frontman, put down the sticks he’d been bashing with Keith Moon-like flourishes, picked up his bass guitar and took his place at center stage. The first set concentrated on Commonwealth, a particularly egalitarian showcase in which each member wrote songs for one “side” of a traditional double record. These tracks are as engaging as any of the band’s great singles: Lead guitarist Patrick Pentland’s “Keep Swinging (Downtown),” Murphy’s “Carried Away,” with its bittersweet echoes of Fleetwood Mac, and the sweet-voiced Ferguson’s “You’ve Got a Lot On Your Mind” were given vibrant treatment. The set culminated in the stirring, waltz-time “Marquee and the Moon,” which nods to clubs where the band cut its teeth in its native Halifax.
The generous second set picked and chose from among Sloan’s 11 albums. Throughout, the band never wasted a note or lost cohesion, with Pentland adding stinging leads, Scott becoming a demon on the drums, Murphy accompanying himself with limber bass lines, and Ferguson, a bit enigmatic behind the bill of his cap, playing rhythm guitar and sounding like heaven every time he opened his mouth. Credit also goes to longtime keyboardist Gregory Macdonald, who added harmony vocals and even played some bass.
For an encore, Scott was back in front, with birthday privileges. After a ripping cover of the Descendents’ “Catalina,” the group paid tribute to the recently broken-up Guided By Voices, who had been scheduled to play the main space that night. The volume and fuzz went up a notch, and rousing takes on the less familiar “Some Drilling Implied” and “Tractor Rape Chain” followed. The latter became a sing-along for an audience that didn’t see anything odd about howling out the nonsensical title phrase as if it were the national anthem. Finally, the band launched into the perennial set-closing “Money City Maniacs,” which involves huge, Cheap Trick-reminiscent chords, lusty clapping of hands and a shout-along chorus that rhymes “The joke is” with “Coke fizz” to glorious effect.
Despite a few audience members conspicuously singing along to every single lyric, the garrulous and charming Murphy acknowledged that Sloan might be new to some and even thanked those who dragged their spouses with them. With their regular-guy personae and gale-force performance, it’s a sure bet that Sloan made a few more converts last night.
--taken from: Indy Week
Friday, November 14, 2014
Canadian alternative ‘niche band’ Sloan come to Boot & Saddle
--taken from: Philly.com
by Allie Volpe
Despite releasing 11 albums over two decades, Sloan's music features a timelessness where you're not really sure what year it came out in. Although their methods have skewed more independent than collaborative, they've managed to keep a good thing going since the early '90s. Though when it came to their latest effort, the four members of the Canadian alt-rock outfit — Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland and Andrew Scott — each decided to do their own thing.
“I don’t think the goal was to be cohesive,” said Patrick Pentland, one-fourth of the multi-instrumentalist, songwriter extraordinaire group playing Boot and Saddle on Sunday, Nov. 16, said of Commonwealth, released on Sept. 9. “I think the goal was to have four people present what they want. It sort of defeats the purpose of doing four separate EPs or records.”
Commonwealth is an impressive double album designed to give each member a moment in the spotlight, each song on the respective member’s portion of the album effortlessly bleeding into one another. The release is essentially a series of four EPs in which each guy has independently written and recorded his quarter of the album, over its 15 songs and 58 minutes (the last track being an impressive near 18 minutes).
Aimed ideally for vinyl with no apparent listening order for each EP, Commonwealth assigns each member of the band a card suit (Ferguson with diamonds, Murphy on hearts, Pentland taking over clubs, and Scott’s spade) and lets the listener decide which way they’d like to tackle the records.
“The initial intention was for it to be listened to as almost four separate releases in that it was supposed to be four solo EPs supposed to be released at the same time,” Pentland continues.
Shorter than KISS’s 1978 release of four solo albums, in which each member essentially recorded a full album, Sloan wrote Commonwealth in essentially the same manor as they always have: each guy penning his own tunes, almost independently records them, save for drums and keyboards, and they get put on an album. Only this time the sequence makes a whole lot of difference — and the amount of airtime, so to speak, each member gets is equal.
However, they’ve never been one to collectively sit down as a group and write an album together. It almost seems like that would be too easy. Individually writing and recording their own respective songs, then deciding which ones would make the cut has been common practice.
“The overall idea was for each member to present what they wanted to present musically at the time,” Pentland said.
Revealing that Sloan “don’t always get along as a band,” there seldom comes a time when other members speak out or “veto” each other’s work when compiling an album, resulting in very little compromising in each individual’s artistic presentation. “Rarely does anyone speak up and say to somebody else ‘I don’t think that’s a good idea,’” he said. “We usually know individually what’s working and what’s not working.”
And it’s been working for over two decades. Working through rocky times in the past and never considering a personnel change, Sloan has simply existed in the music sphere, emerging in the grunge era and withstanding the digital revolution.
“Any band is just the sum of all of its parts, so if someone’s not happy or weak in their playing, there’s a multitude of reasons where bands’ lineups change,” Pentland explains. “There’s four principal songwriters in Sloan. Because we all sing and produce in the band, we have more invested in the band.”
Coming up in the early 1990s, when a lot was happening musically (the Beastie Boys, R.E.M. and Alice in Chains all put out albums in 1992, when Sloan’s debut Smeared was released), Sloan — the-not-really-punk, too-clean-to-be-grunge, straightforward, melodic rock — was just trying to find their way. “I think that for awhile, especially at the beginning, we were interested in what was going on with our peers and bands who were kind of like us but more successful. We were obviously looking to be as successful as say, Weezer, or something like that.”
But as time went on and the musical landscape shifted, it became less about what the competition was doing and how they can adequately maintain artistic integrity while still earning a paycheck — which comes down to first having their accessible and withstanding tunes listened to. “I wouldn’t say we’re a household name in Canada, but we’re much more known. In the U.S., we’re seen as a niche band or a boutique band,” Pentland notes.
Credit it to the “hipster mentality” of listeners holding a band close simply out of fear of them getting “too cool,” or what Pentland calls the “underdog status.”
“I feel like we’re kind of trapped as that,” he continues. “We’re in our mid-40s and its not like were going to be on posters on teenagers’ walls.”
Though Pentland was quick to follow up with, “We’re comfortable where we are. There are bands as successful or unsuccessful as we are.”
And that seems to be enough, still “selling out” enough to play festivals and make videos, Pentland declares that it’s still their job to make music, art form or not: “Integrity is great, but you don’t have to go crazy with it,” following up with “Don’t be too precious about it, nothing will be cool enough.”
Generally playing larger shows and festivals in their native Canada and appealing to more “general audiences,” claims Pentland, Sloan tours in the U.S. typically have the band coming through smaller venues like Philly’s Boot and Saddle. However, given their large repertoire, they eliminate the need for an opening act.
Breaking down “An Evening with Sloan” into two sets, the first portion of the performance focuses heavily on Commonwealth while, after an intermission, the latter half features singles, and more recently, deeper cuts — all while switching singing duties, playing frontman for his own songs.
However, sometimes transforming recorded versions of the songs into something adaptable in a live condition, can get a little tricky, particularly with Commonwealth’s nearly 18-minute suite “Fourty-Eight Portraits,” which, yes — they’re playing live. “It took us about two weeks to get it proper.”
Beyond 2014, Pentland is excited for what lays ahead. They’ll finish touring, he’ll welcome a new baby to the brood and Sloan will look to prepping a re-release for 2016, the second time they’ve done so after giving 1994’s Twice Removed the same treatment in 2012.
“Who knows what the record industry is going to be like by then?” he wondered. “We’ve seen the industry change many times. We’ve lasted through the whole mp3/Napster thing and now there’s the whole vinyl thing. I think the way people consume music is changing again. The way music is delivered is changing, but people still want to listen to it.”
--taken from: Philly.com
by Allie Volpe
Despite releasing 11 albums over two decades, Sloan's music features a timelessness where you're not really sure what year it came out in. Although their methods have skewed more independent than collaborative, they've managed to keep a good thing going since the early '90s. Though when it came to their latest effort, the four members of the Canadian alt-rock outfit — Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland and Andrew Scott — each decided to do their own thing.
“I don’t think the goal was to be cohesive,” said Patrick Pentland, one-fourth of the multi-instrumentalist, songwriter extraordinaire group playing Boot and Saddle on Sunday, Nov. 16, said of Commonwealth, released on Sept. 9. “I think the goal was to have four people present what they want. It sort of defeats the purpose of doing four separate EPs or records.”
Commonwealth is an impressive double album designed to give each member a moment in the spotlight, each song on the respective member’s portion of the album effortlessly bleeding into one another. The release is essentially a series of four EPs in which each guy has independently written and recorded his quarter of the album, over its 15 songs and 58 minutes (the last track being an impressive near 18 minutes).
Aimed ideally for vinyl with no apparent listening order for each EP, Commonwealth assigns each member of the band a card suit (Ferguson with diamonds, Murphy on hearts, Pentland taking over clubs, and Scott’s spade) and lets the listener decide which way they’d like to tackle the records.
“The initial intention was for it to be listened to as almost four separate releases in that it was supposed to be four solo EPs supposed to be released at the same time,” Pentland continues.
Shorter than KISS’s 1978 release of four solo albums, in which each member essentially recorded a full album, Sloan wrote Commonwealth in essentially the same manor as they always have: each guy penning his own tunes, almost independently records them, save for drums and keyboards, and they get put on an album. Only this time the sequence makes a whole lot of difference — and the amount of airtime, so to speak, each member gets is equal.
However, they’ve never been one to collectively sit down as a group and write an album together. It almost seems like that would be too easy. Individually writing and recording their own respective songs, then deciding which ones would make the cut has been common practice.
“The overall idea was for each member to present what they wanted to present musically at the time,” Pentland said.
Revealing that Sloan “don’t always get along as a band,” there seldom comes a time when other members speak out or “veto” each other’s work when compiling an album, resulting in very little compromising in each individual’s artistic presentation. “Rarely does anyone speak up and say to somebody else ‘I don’t think that’s a good idea,’” he said. “We usually know individually what’s working and what’s not working.”
And it’s been working for over two decades. Working through rocky times in the past and never considering a personnel change, Sloan has simply existed in the music sphere, emerging in the grunge era and withstanding the digital revolution.
“Any band is just the sum of all of its parts, so if someone’s not happy or weak in their playing, there’s a multitude of reasons where bands’ lineups change,” Pentland explains. “There’s four principal songwriters in Sloan. Because we all sing and produce in the band, we have more invested in the band.”
Coming up in the early 1990s, when a lot was happening musically (the Beastie Boys, R.E.M. and Alice in Chains all put out albums in 1992, when Sloan’s debut Smeared was released), Sloan — the-not-really-punk, too-clean-to-be-grunge, straightforward, melodic rock — was just trying to find their way. “I think that for awhile, especially at the beginning, we were interested in what was going on with our peers and bands who were kind of like us but more successful. We were obviously looking to be as successful as say, Weezer, or something like that.”
But as time went on and the musical landscape shifted, it became less about what the competition was doing and how they can adequately maintain artistic integrity while still earning a paycheck — which comes down to first having their accessible and withstanding tunes listened to. “I wouldn’t say we’re a household name in Canada, but we’re much more known. In the U.S., we’re seen as a niche band or a boutique band,” Pentland notes.
Credit it to the “hipster mentality” of listeners holding a band close simply out of fear of them getting “too cool,” or what Pentland calls the “underdog status.”
“I feel like we’re kind of trapped as that,” he continues. “We’re in our mid-40s and its not like were going to be on posters on teenagers’ walls.”
Though Pentland was quick to follow up with, “We’re comfortable where we are. There are bands as successful or unsuccessful as we are.”
And that seems to be enough, still “selling out” enough to play festivals and make videos, Pentland declares that it’s still their job to make music, art form or not: “Integrity is great, but you don’t have to go crazy with it,” following up with “Don’t be too precious about it, nothing will be cool enough.”
Generally playing larger shows and festivals in their native Canada and appealing to more “general audiences,” claims Pentland, Sloan tours in the U.S. typically have the band coming through smaller venues like Philly’s Boot and Saddle. However, given their large repertoire, they eliminate the need for an opening act.
Breaking down “An Evening with Sloan” into two sets, the first portion of the performance focuses heavily on Commonwealth while, after an intermission, the latter half features singles, and more recently, deeper cuts — all while switching singing duties, playing frontman for his own songs.
However, sometimes transforming recorded versions of the songs into something adaptable in a live condition, can get a little tricky, particularly with Commonwealth’s nearly 18-minute suite “Fourty-Eight Portraits,” which, yes — they’re playing live. “It took us about two weeks to get it proper.”
Beyond 2014, Pentland is excited for what lays ahead. They’ll finish touring, he’ll welcome a new baby to the brood and Sloan will look to prepping a re-release for 2016, the second time they’ve done so after giving 1994’s Twice Removed the same treatment in 2012.
“Who knows what the record industry is going to be like by then?” he wondered. “We’ve seen the industry change many times. We’ve lasted through the whole mp3/Napster thing and now there’s the whole vinyl thing. I think the way people consume music is changing again. The way music is delivered is changing, but people still want to listen to it.”
--taken from: Philly.com
Sloan shows off the sum of its parts at Great Scott
--taken from: Boston Globe
by Maura Johnston
In certain rock circles, the term pop often refers to bands that are just a bit too good at crafting memorable hooks and surrounding them with rich harmonies, incisive lyrics, and intuitive yet surprising instrumental twists. The Canadian quartet Sloan probably sums up the rock purist’s platonic pop ideal: Over two-plus decades together, the band has consistently released smart, hooky rock, from “Underwhelmed,” an early-career ode to romantic and linguistic misunderstandings, to “Unkind,” a stripped-down 2011 take on big-tent AOR.
Sloan’s 11th album, “Commonwealth,” is a double disc with a twist: Each of four LP sides is themed after a card deck’s suit, and given over to one band member’s creative vision. Sloan has moved as a unit so fluidly over its career, with members switching off on instrumental and vocal duties, that the pick-a-side proposal is utterly appealing, showing just how each part of the band contributes to its precision-grade whole.
Thursday night’s two-set show at Great Scott opened with “Forty Eight Portraits,” the sprawling suite that serves as Commonwealth’s closing statement. The brainchild of Andrew Scott, it has moments of Stones swagger and ELO pomp, topped off by a shout-out to Lou Reed. Drawing a crowd in with a nearly 20-minute shapeshifter would be a risky opening gambit for nearly anyone, but here, the room was drawn right in, shimmying and clapping along.
Set One was heavy on “Commonwealth” tracks. Patrick Pentland took the spotlight for the swaggering “Keep Swinging (Downtown)” and “13 (Under a Bad Sign),” his husky rasp giving the harmonies behind him a slightly sinister edge. Next was Jay Ferguson, whose “Commonwealth” contributions might be the album’s most candy-coated; the gooey “You’ve Got A Lot On Your Mind” showcased Sloan’s ability to play feather-light love songs. And Chris Murphy’s “You Don’t Need Excuses to Be Good,” which closed out the opening half, served the same role as synthesis as on the record: It’s sweet and sour, crisp and loose, compressing decades of radio-ready rock into three minutes and change.
The rest of the night was given over, for the most part, to Sloan’s vast catalog. The siren call of “Money City Maniacs,” the chiming urgency of “500 Up,” the resigned gloominess of “The Other Man”: Each has different stylistic appeal, but all contributed to a night that could have lasted for another two hours without exhausting Sloan’s many hits or the out-past-midnight crowd.
--taken from: Boston Globe
by Maura Johnston
In certain rock circles, the term pop often refers to bands that are just a bit too good at crafting memorable hooks and surrounding them with rich harmonies, incisive lyrics, and intuitive yet surprising instrumental twists. The Canadian quartet Sloan probably sums up the rock purist’s platonic pop ideal: Over two-plus decades together, the band has consistently released smart, hooky rock, from “Underwhelmed,” an early-career ode to romantic and linguistic misunderstandings, to “Unkind,” a stripped-down 2011 take on big-tent AOR.
Sloan’s 11th album, “Commonwealth,” is a double disc with a twist: Each of four LP sides is themed after a card deck’s suit, and given over to one band member’s creative vision. Sloan has moved as a unit so fluidly over its career, with members switching off on instrumental and vocal duties, that the pick-a-side proposal is utterly appealing, showing just how each part of the band contributes to its precision-grade whole.
Thursday night’s two-set show at Great Scott opened with “Forty Eight Portraits,” the sprawling suite that serves as Commonwealth’s closing statement. The brainchild of Andrew Scott, it has moments of Stones swagger and ELO pomp, topped off by a shout-out to Lou Reed. Drawing a crowd in with a nearly 20-minute shapeshifter would be a risky opening gambit for nearly anyone, but here, the room was drawn right in, shimmying and clapping along.
Set One was heavy on “Commonwealth” tracks. Patrick Pentland took the spotlight for the swaggering “Keep Swinging (Downtown)” and “13 (Under a Bad Sign),” his husky rasp giving the harmonies behind him a slightly sinister edge. Next was Jay Ferguson, whose “Commonwealth” contributions might be the album’s most candy-coated; the gooey “You’ve Got A Lot On Your Mind” showcased Sloan’s ability to play feather-light love songs. And Chris Murphy’s “You Don’t Need Excuses to Be Good,” which closed out the opening half, served the same role as synthesis as on the record: It’s sweet and sour, crisp and loose, compressing decades of radio-ready rock into three minutes and change.
The rest of the night was given over, for the most part, to Sloan’s vast catalog. The siren call of “Money City Maniacs,” the chiming urgency of “500 Up,” the resigned gloominess of “The Other Man”: Each has different stylistic appeal, but all contributed to a night that could have lasted for another two hours without exhausting Sloan’s many hits or the out-past-midnight crowd.
--taken from: Boston Globe
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Sloan goes solo, sort of, on new record Commonwealth
--taken from: Metro News
by Trevor Greenway
Members of the Canadian rock band Sloan are literally getting their own 15 minutes of fame.
On their new album Commonwealth, each of the quartet’s members got a side of the double vinyl record to use as an open canvas – Canadian democracy at its finest.
It’s a way for the band to put out that inevitable solo record that aging rockers usually venture into without going on a hiatus or breaking up.
“Our band is probably one of the few bands where everybody could actually make a solo record if they chose to, because everybody sings and writes and plays different instruments,” said Jay Ferguson, who is typically the band’s rhythm guitarist.
On Commonwealth, he sings, shreds and hammers on the drums – skills he will put on display during the band’s Ottawa stop Nov. 28 at Mavericks.
“We thought we would do it all under the guise of Sloan and make a double album where everybody gets their own 15 minutes of real estate to do exactly what they want,” he said.
For guitarist Andrew Scott, he takes a bit more time, occupying his side with one epic track worth 17 minutes. Much of the album still sounds like classic Sloan, but each side has its distinct flavour – from the heavy, catchy riffs that made the band popular in the 90s to the more melodic tones that made 2001’s Pretty Together so fluid.
The beauty of releasing a solo album together as a band for Ferguson is that he gets to hear three-quarters of the record as a fan – something he hasn’t really experienced in the band’s 23-year career.
“I am a fan of the other people in the band, so almost reacting to it as a fan, it’s fun to listen to what I would imagine a Chris (Murphy) solo record to sound like,” said Ferguson.
“From a fan perspective, I like the record and I hope other people do to.”
--taken from: Metro News
by Trevor Greenway
Members of the Canadian rock band Sloan are literally getting their own 15 minutes of fame.
On their new album Commonwealth, each of the quartet’s members got a side of the double vinyl record to use as an open canvas – Canadian democracy at its finest.
It’s a way for the band to put out that inevitable solo record that aging rockers usually venture into without going on a hiatus or breaking up.
“Our band is probably one of the few bands where everybody could actually make a solo record if they chose to, because everybody sings and writes and plays different instruments,” said Jay Ferguson, who is typically the band’s rhythm guitarist.
On Commonwealth, he sings, shreds and hammers on the drums – skills he will put on display during the band’s Ottawa stop Nov. 28 at Mavericks.
“We thought we would do it all under the guise of Sloan and make a double album where everybody gets their own 15 minutes of real estate to do exactly what they want,” he said.
For guitarist Andrew Scott, he takes a bit more time, occupying his side with one epic track worth 17 minutes. Much of the album still sounds like classic Sloan, but each side has its distinct flavour – from the heavy, catchy riffs that made the band popular in the 90s to the more melodic tones that made 2001’s Pretty Together so fluid.
The beauty of releasing a solo album together as a band for Ferguson is that he gets to hear three-quarters of the record as a fan – something he hasn’t really experienced in the band’s 23-year career.
“I am a fan of the other people in the band, so almost reacting to it as a fan, it’s fun to listen to what I would imagine a Chris (Murphy) solo record to sound like,” said Ferguson.
“From a fan perspective, I like the record and I hope other people do to.”
--taken from: Metro News
Friday, November 7, 2014
Farrell Four: Pick hits for weekend club shows
--taken from: Buffalo News
by Michael Farrell
Notes on the confoundedly cult (in America) quartet’s show have already lined this publication’s Gusto pages and website. But when there’s the chance to see a band of Sloan’s ilk tour through two decades of clap-happy pop gems, harmonious staples and Gibson-driven greats within a cozy joint like the Tralf, that chance needs to be mentioned twice. Or three times, just to shake you into coherence of the fact that, yes, you need to see Halifax’s finest knife through “Twice Removed” and “Never Hear The End Of It,” classics amid examples of Sloan’s endurance via last month’s excellent “Commonwealth.” Conclusion: Get to the Theater District on Sunday night.
--taken from: Buffalo News
by Michael Farrell
Notes on the confoundedly cult (in America) quartet’s show have already lined this publication’s Gusto pages and website. But when there’s the chance to see a band of Sloan’s ilk tour through two decades of clap-happy pop gems, harmonious staples and Gibson-driven greats within a cozy joint like the Tralf, that chance needs to be mentioned twice. Or three times, just to shake you into coherence of the fact that, yes, you need to see Halifax’s finest knife through “Twice Removed” and “Never Hear The End Of It,” classics amid examples of Sloan’s endurance via last month’s excellent “Commonwealth.” Conclusion: Get to the Theater District on Sunday night.
--taken from: Buffalo News
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Sloan’s commonwealth approach to music breeds success
--taken from: The Detroit News
Canadian rock group Sloan evenly splits its money, songwriting duties as it nears 25 years of making music.
by Adam Graham
It’s not easy to keep a band together for nearly 25 years. Just ask the members of Sloan.
The Canadian rockers — Chris Murphy, Jay Ferguson, Andrew Scott and Patrick Pentland, all of whom trade off singing and instrumental duties within the band — have weathered all sorts of storms since forming in 1991 and are now 11 albums deep into a career that has been a model of consistency and longevity.
That doesn’t mean there haven’t been bumps in the road. Ask Murphy how he and his bandmates are getting along these days. “It’s like, well, how are the Baldwin brothers these days? They all hate each other, but they’re brothers,” he says. “It’s the exact same dynamic we have going.”
Sloan has nearly broken up twice — in 1994 and 2006 — but has stuck it out and continues to play on, and will perform at Saint Andrew’s Hall Saturday. Just like the Baldwin Brothers aren’t breaking up, neither is Sloan.
The band’s commercial success over the years has been moderate — “we play the same venues we played in 1993,” Murphy notes — which has helped keep them both level-headed and hungry. (Because of Detroit’s proximity to Canada — and its airplay on CIMX-FM (88.7), especially in the ’90s — Sloan has always enjoyed a healthy fanbase in the Motor City.)
“We’ve never been insanely successful, but we’ve never been so unsuccessful that we can’t continue,” says Ferguson, who, like all four members of the band, contributes equally to the group’s songwriting. “If we were so successful, if we were all billionaires, it would be like, ‘Hey, we don’t have to make any albums anymore!’ And we’ve never made so little money that we can’t continue to do it. We’re kind of in that middle mode where it’s almost like a small business: We have to keep releasing music or reissues or keep playing shows in order to keep paying ourselves. It’s the best job in the world, but it is our job, and we have to keep working in order to make ends meet.”
One of the ways they’ve been able to make ends meet is by evenly splitting all the band’s revenues four ways. “We’re the ultimate mutual fund,” Ferguson says. That democracy spills over into the group’s shared songwriting duties, and means if one member does well, everyone benefits: “If somebody doesn’t have a lot of songs, someone else does,” says Ferguson. “And if somebody hasn’t written any hits, someone else has a song that will do well at radio.”
Those business practices have kept the band members happy, but they haven’t been able to fix all the day-to-day issues of being a band. The closest Sloan ever came to breaking up was in 1994: The band had just split from Geffen Records, which released the band’s second album, “Twice Removed,” and the rigors of touring and big label shenanigans had taken their toll.
The band members decided to go their separate ways in December of that year, but they still had a number of tour dates scheduled into summer 1995, which they decided to play for the paychecks.
“A lot of those were cynical, (poor) shows that I didn’t want to play, but we needed the money,” says Murphy. “Jay and I were running (the band’s label) Murderecords. That’s how we spent all our time, promoting bands that didn’t make any money, but it was fun to do. And I was touring that year in a band called the Super Friendz. But we gradually got back together. It was like, ‘Let’s make one more record, let’s make a record to support Murderecords, it will be our last record.’ And gradually through 1996 it got to be more and more, and we figured more and more that we were going to continue to be a band.”
They soldiered on, but the band went through a period of self-examination around 2006 when a lot of what Scott refers to as “petty resentment” with his bandmates boiled over and needed to be addressed. Through a series of sit-downs, they were able to get past them and move forward.
“We all came to the realization that we are all very different human beings with different wants and expectations. But we have built something we can’t explain; at some base chemical level it works, and a lot of people really enjoy it,” says Scott. “So why let the little things cloud the meat of the matter?”
Some things still bother Scott, but he doesn’t let them derail the band.
“In some ways we’re operating better than we ever have, on all pistons.” he says. “We’ve got a lot of water under our bridges and a lot of time with one another, and it’s literally like another family. It’s got all the dysfunctionality of any family, but once you wade through all that petty surface (nonsense), you focus on what matters.”
Sloan’s latest album, “Commonwealth,” was released in September and is the band’s first since 2011’s “The Double Cross.”
“This time it was like, what should we do next?” says Pentland. “We could just turn out another record, or we could try to do something a little different.”
They decided on the latter, splitting up the album four ways and giving each member about 15 minutes to play with however he saw fit. Everyone came up with a handful of songs, save for Scott, who put together a nearly 18-minute suite titled “Forty-Eight Portraits.”
“It didn’t end up being that much different than what we would normally do, in terms of the types of songs,” Pentland says. “It’s just they’re in a row.”
The album is sequenced like four solo EPs: Ferguson’s set opens the record, followed by Murphy and Pentland, while Scott’s section closes the album. In the album artwork, each member is assigned a suit like a deck of cards: Ferguson is the Diamond, Murphy the Heart, Pentland the Club and Scott the Spade.
Pentland’s approach was originally much different, but he let practicality take over: “After a while, I just said, ‘I’ll put out songs that I want to be playing live for the next year.’ ”
That’s where Sloan is these days: Musically ambitious and creatively restless but mindful of the task at hand.
Looking back at the band’s lengthy career, Scott says if there was one song to sum up Sloan, it would be the opening song off of 1996’s “One Chord to Another.” It was one of the first songs the guys recorded after nearly calling it quits, and it wound up becoming the biggest single of the band’s career.
It’s title? “The Good in Everyone.”
--taken from: The Detroit News
Canadian rock group Sloan evenly splits its money, songwriting duties as it nears 25 years of making music.
by Adam Graham
It’s not easy to keep a band together for nearly 25 years. Just ask the members of Sloan.
The Canadian rockers — Chris Murphy, Jay Ferguson, Andrew Scott and Patrick Pentland, all of whom trade off singing and instrumental duties within the band — have weathered all sorts of storms since forming in 1991 and are now 11 albums deep into a career that has been a model of consistency and longevity.
That doesn’t mean there haven’t been bumps in the road. Ask Murphy how he and his bandmates are getting along these days. “It’s like, well, how are the Baldwin brothers these days? They all hate each other, but they’re brothers,” he says. “It’s the exact same dynamic we have going.”
Sloan has nearly broken up twice — in 1994 and 2006 — but has stuck it out and continues to play on, and will perform at Saint Andrew’s Hall Saturday. Just like the Baldwin Brothers aren’t breaking up, neither is Sloan.
The band’s commercial success over the years has been moderate — “we play the same venues we played in 1993,” Murphy notes — which has helped keep them both level-headed and hungry. (Because of Detroit’s proximity to Canada — and its airplay on CIMX-FM (88.7), especially in the ’90s — Sloan has always enjoyed a healthy fanbase in the Motor City.)
“We’ve never been insanely successful, but we’ve never been so unsuccessful that we can’t continue,” says Ferguson, who, like all four members of the band, contributes equally to the group’s songwriting. “If we were so successful, if we were all billionaires, it would be like, ‘Hey, we don’t have to make any albums anymore!’ And we’ve never made so little money that we can’t continue to do it. We’re kind of in that middle mode where it’s almost like a small business: We have to keep releasing music or reissues or keep playing shows in order to keep paying ourselves. It’s the best job in the world, but it is our job, and we have to keep working in order to make ends meet.”
One of the ways they’ve been able to make ends meet is by evenly splitting all the band’s revenues four ways. “We’re the ultimate mutual fund,” Ferguson says. That democracy spills over into the group’s shared songwriting duties, and means if one member does well, everyone benefits: “If somebody doesn’t have a lot of songs, someone else does,” says Ferguson. “And if somebody hasn’t written any hits, someone else has a song that will do well at radio.”
Those business practices have kept the band members happy, but they haven’t been able to fix all the day-to-day issues of being a band. The closest Sloan ever came to breaking up was in 1994: The band had just split from Geffen Records, which released the band’s second album, “Twice Removed,” and the rigors of touring and big label shenanigans had taken their toll.
The band members decided to go their separate ways in December of that year, but they still had a number of tour dates scheduled into summer 1995, which they decided to play for the paychecks.
“A lot of those were cynical, (poor) shows that I didn’t want to play, but we needed the money,” says Murphy. “Jay and I were running (the band’s label) Murderecords. That’s how we spent all our time, promoting bands that didn’t make any money, but it was fun to do. And I was touring that year in a band called the Super Friendz. But we gradually got back together. It was like, ‘Let’s make one more record, let’s make a record to support Murderecords, it will be our last record.’ And gradually through 1996 it got to be more and more, and we figured more and more that we were going to continue to be a band.”
They soldiered on, but the band went through a period of self-examination around 2006 when a lot of what Scott refers to as “petty resentment” with his bandmates boiled over and needed to be addressed. Through a series of sit-downs, they were able to get past them and move forward.
“We all came to the realization that we are all very different human beings with different wants and expectations. But we have built something we can’t explain; at some base chemical level it works, and a lot of people really enjoy it,” says Scott. “So why let the little things cloud the meat of the matter?”
Some things still bother Scott, but he doesn’t let them derail the band.
“In some ways we’re operating better than we ever have, on all pistons.” he says. “We’ve got a lot of water under our bridges and a lot of time with one another, and it’s literally like another family. It’s got all the dysfunctionality of any family, but once you wade through all that petty surface (nonsense), you focus on what matters.”
Sloan’s latest album, “Commonwealth,” was released in September and is the band’s first since 2011’s “The Double Cross.”
“This time it was like, what should we do next?” says Pentland. “We could just turn out another record, or we could try to do something a little different.”
They decided on the latter, splitting up the album four ways and giving each member about 15 minutes to play with however he saw fit. Everyone came up with a handful of songs, save for Scott, who put together a nearly 18-minute suite titled “Forty-Eight Portraits.”
“It didn’t end up being that much different than what we would normally do, in terms of the types of songs,” Pentland says. “It’s just they’re in a row.”
The album is sequenced like four solo EPs: Ferguson’s set opens the record, followed by Murphy and Pentland, while Scott’s section closes the album. In the album artwork, each member is assigned a suit like a deck of cards: Ferguson is the Diamond, Murphy the Heart, Pentland the Club and Scott the Spade.
Pentland’s approach was originally much different, but he let practicality take over: “After a while, I just said, ‘I’ll put out songs that I want to be playing live for the next year.’ ”
That’s where Sloan is these days: Musically ambitious and creatively restless but mindful of the task at hand.
Looking back at the band’s lengthy career, Scott says if there was one song to sum up Sloan, it would be the opening song off of 1996’s “One Chord to Another.” It was one of the first songs the guys recorded after nearly calling it quits, and it wound up becoming the biggest single of the band’s career.
It’s title? “The Good in Everyone.”
--taken from: The Detroit News
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Power Pop Purists: After 25 Years, Sloan is Still Going Strong
--taken from: Cleveland Scene
by Jeff Niesel
When the power pop group Sloan formed in Halifax in 1991, there was a thriving indie rock scene. Hard to believe that such a remote part of Canada would have such a vibrant scene, but Sloan singer-drummer Andrew Scott says the environment helped bring the members of Sloan together.
“There was a very fertile music scene there long before we came around,” says Scott. “It was a very art-rock and punk-rock scene. It was huge and hugely influential on all of us. We all had bands prior to this band too. Halifax was a small enough town that everyone knew everybody because the scene was so insular.”
By what Scott calls a “weird stroke of luck,” the band signed to Geffen Records shortly after forming. The label released the band’s acclaimed studio debut, Smeared, in 1993. But it quickly became apparent things weren’t going to work out so well with Geffen.
“We played a show in L.A. and had Weezer open for us,” says Scott. “Our record was thrown against the wall and Weezer’s was thrown against the wall. Which one stuck? It’s a total random lottery. The major labels were going through this huge upheaval and everyone was going through this uncertainty. No one knew if they were going to have a job in the morning. Our band was this weird band from Canada. It’s like the people at the label thought, ‘They have four songwriters. How do you market that?’ The mentality was lazy and risk averse.”
Scott says there was even some talk of ditching the four singer-songwriter concept and having bassist Chris Murphy handle all the vocals, something that went against the band’s nature.
“That defeats the aim of what we set out to do,” says Scott. “At that point, they buried us. The learning curve was pretty vertical for us. We were pretty young and right out of the gate we were on this massive American label. We put out two records with them. Looking back, we don’t have any regrets. It was all as it should have been. Had we been super successful as a result of that, we probably wouldn’t be around today.”
The band hasn’t just survived. It’s thrived. Its latest release, Commonwealth, is a double album with each member staking out a single side. It commences with punchy, Beatles-like “We’ve Come This Far” and then concludes with “Forty-Eight Portraits,” an 18-minute pop suite. The album embraces a wide range of musical styles as each of Sloan’s four members draws from a different set of influences.
“We’ve always been a band that’s boasted four singers and songwriters,” says Scott. “We’ve always tried to dissuade anyone from putting out a solo record. No one has ever felt that desire because they get to do whatever the fuck you want in the context of the band. We had talked about the notion [of making an album divided into four sides] over the years. This was the time where it made sense for us. We just said, ‘Fuck it. Let’s do it. Everybody gets a side of wax. Everyone can curate their own real estate and do whatever the hell we want.’ It’s not different from how we’ve made records in the past. People can make decisions but it comes down to he who is working on his stuff. That’s always the case with our records but this is one is laid out a little more clearly.”
And yet the album still sound cohesive — not that that’s something Scott says is intentional.
“I can’t see it or hear it objectively,” he says. “I’m too inside the glass box. I know what you mean and that term ‘cohesive’ has been bandied about for so many years. Or not cohesive. I don’t give a shit. It just comes out the way it comes out and you can take it or leave it.”
So, what has been the key to keeping the band going for so long with no line-up changes?
“I think it’s many fold,” says Scott. “We appreciate the line of work. We don’t make a lot of money, but we all own homes in downtown Toronto. We’re making a living but it’s not high on the hog. That’s not what it was about anyway. It was never intended as a get rich quick scheme. We wanted to make art and share it with whoever was into it. We’re fortunate to still be doing it 25 years down the road. I think we make relevant, quality work, which is the most important thing because the records we leave behind will remain in the history books so to speak. In my opinion, if our most recent record isn’t as good as or better than the last one, then that’s when my red flag goes up. It’s the personal quality control that you have to constantly monitor.”
--taken from: Cleveland Scene
by Jeff Niesel
When the power pop group Sloan formed in Halifax in 1991, there was a thriving indie rock scene. Hard to believe that such a remote part of Canada would have such a vibrant scene, but Sloan singer-drummer Andrew Scott says the environment helped bring the members of Sloan together.
“There was a very fertile music scene there long before we came around,” says Scott. “It was a very art-rock and punk-rock scene. It was huge and hugely influential on all of us. We all had bands prior to this band too. Halifax was a small enough town that everyone knew everybody because the scene was so insular.”
By what Scott calls a “weird stroke of luck,” the band signed to Geffen Records shortly after forming. The label released the band’s acclaimed studio debut, Smeared, in 1993. But it quickly became apparent things weren’t going to work out so well with Geffen.
“We played a show in L.A. and had Weezer open for us,” says Scott. “Our record was thrown against the wall and Weezer’s was thrown against the wall. Which one stuck? It’s a total random lottery. The major labels were going through this huge upheaval and everyone was going through this uncertainty. No one knew if they were going to have a job in the morning. Our band was this weird band from Canada. It’s like the people at the label thought, ‘They have four songwriters. How do you market that?’ The mentality was lazy and risk averse.”
Scott says there was even some talk of ditching the four singer-songwriter concept and having bassist Chris Murphy handle all the vocals, something that went against the band’s nature.
“That defeats the aim of what we set out to do,” says Scott. “At that point, they buried us. The learning curve was pretty vertical for us. We were pretty young and right out of the gate we were on this massive American label. We put out two records with them. Looking back, we don’t have any regrets. It was all as it should have been. Had we been super successful as a result of that, we probably wouldn’t be around today.”
The band hasn’t just survived. It’s thrived. Its latest release, Commonwealth, is a double album with each member staking out a single side. It commences with punchy, Beatles-like “We’ve Come This Far” and then concludes with “Forty-Eight Portraits,” an 18-minute pop suite. The album embraces a wide range of musical styles as each of Sloan’s four members draws from a different set of influences.
“We’ve always been a band that’s boasted four singers and songwriters,” says Scott. “We’ve always tried to dissuade anyone from putting out a solo record. No one has ever felt that desire because they get to do whatever the fuck you want in the context of the band. We had talked about the notion [of making an album divided into four sides] over the years. This was the time where it made sense for us. We just said, ‘Fuck it. Let’s do it. Everybody gets a side of wax. Everyone can curate their own real estate and do whatever the hell we want.’ It’s not different from how we’ve made records in the past. People can make decisions but it comes down to he who is working on his stuff. That’s always the case with our records but this is one is laid out a little more clearly.”
And yet the album still sound cohesive — not that that’s something Scott says is intentional.
“I can’t see it or hear it objectively,” he says. “I’m too inside the glass box. I know what you mean and that term ‘cohesive’ has been bandied about for so many years. Or not cohesive. I don’t give a shit. It just comes out the way it comes out and you can take it or leave it.”
So, what has been the key to keeping the band going for so long with no line-up changes?
“I think it’s many fold,” says Scott. “We appreciate the line of work. We don’t make a lot of money, but we all own homes in downtown Toronto. We’re making a living but it’s not high on the hog. That’s not what it was about anyway. It was never intended as a get rich quick scheme. We wanted to make art and share it with whoever was into it. We’re fortunate to still be doing it 25 years down the road. I think we make relevant, quality work, which is the most important thing because the records we leave behind will remain in the history books so to speak. In my opinion, if our most recent record isn’t as good as or better than the last one, then that’s when my red flag goes up. It’s the personal quality control that you have to constantly monitor.”
--taken from: Cleveland Scene
Sloan performs Sunday in the Tralf
--taken from: The Buffalo News
by Jeff Miers
Taking a page from the Beatles’ “White Album,” Sloan has taken the “separate but together” concept to its ultimate zenith with “Commonwealth,” an album that grants each of the Canadian band’s four members a full “album side” to use as they wish. It helps that all four musicians in the storied alt-pop outfit are excellent songwriters, singers and multi-instrumentalists. Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Andrew Scott and Patrick Pentland have long presented distinct personalities as composers, and it is the commingling of these idiosyncratic musical personae that conjures the band’s magic.
Giving each other space, respect and equal time at bat is an awfully smart way to keep a band together for 20 years, particularly when cult-level stardom is the order of the day. This has always worked for Sloan, with each member aiding in the creation of alt-pop masterpieces like “One Chord To Another,” “Navy Blues” and “Pretty Together.” Interestingly, though “Commonwealth” finds each member working in isolation from his band mates, the result is still an album that sounds hopelessly like Sloan. Hook-heavy, far from stingy with the killer guitar riffs and stuffed with the left-of-center power-pop that always has been the band’s stock in trade, it’s another high point in a career now entering its third decade.
--taken from: The Buffalo News
by Jeff Miers
Taking a page from the Beatles’ “White Album,” Sloan has taken the “separate but together” concept to its ultimate zenith with “Commonwealth,” an album that grants each of the Canadian band’s four members a full “album side” to use as they wish. It helps that all four musicians in the storied alt-pop outfit are excellent songwriters, singers and multi-instrumentalists. Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Andrew Scott and Patrick Pentland have long presented distinct personalities as composers, and it is the commingling of these idiosyncratic musical personae that conjures the band’s magic.
Giving each other space, respect and equal time at bat is an awfully smart way to keep a band together for 20 years, particularly when cult-level stardom is the order of the day. This has always worked for Sloan, with each member aiding in the creation of alt-pop masterpieces like “One Chord To Another,” “Navy Blues” and “Pretty Together.” Interestingly, though “Commonwealth” finds each member working in isolation from his band mates, the result is still an album that sounds hopelessly like Sloan. Hook-heavy, far from stingy with the killer guitar riffs and stuffed with the left-of-center power-pop that always has been the band’s stock in trade, it’s another high point in a career now entering its third decade.
--taken from: The Buffalo News
Monday, November 3, 2014
The Four Equal Sides Of Canadian Quartet Sloan
--taken from: Hartford Courant
by Michael Hamad
Most rock bands, even ones who claim to be democratic, have one, maybe two members who do most of the band-fronting and songwriting.
Canadian rock quartet Sloan makes consistently great records that equally represent each guy, more or less, and they've done so from around the time they started releasing albums in the early '90s. Sloan isn't paying lip service to the idea of democracy; every album has at least one song written and sung by Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland and Andrew Scott (listed here in alphabetical order). They all sing. They switch instruments.
This is not news. Writers who've covered Sloan over the years often lead with the band's democratic arrangement and enviable longevity. The band knows it.
"At this point in our music-making," Murphy, who usually plays bass or drums, said, "when we go to make a record, we ask ourselves: 'What is the hook of the album?' If you want to get written about, what do you do? We don't have that sexy a story. We have a moderate success. None of us have dated celebrities. No one is in rehab. We're not a very sexy story. The story for the past 10 years, if anybody has written anything about us, it's usually, 'How do they do it? I can't believe they're still together.'"
Another thing writers often point out: Sloan can sound like the Beatles, or Big Star, or any of the better power-pop acts with roots in the '60s or '70s. They're all, consistently, pretty great. "For better or worse, I think of my songs as being interchangeably appropriate for any record that we've done since our second record," Murphy said. "Our first record was very of-the-times: 1991, 1992. Everything from then on, we strived to make essentially timeless."
There have been other hooks in recent years. Sloan's last album, "The Double Cross," celebrated their twentieth (XX) anniversary; before that, in 2006, they released "Never Hear the End of It," with a whopping 30 songs. Sloan's latest release, the double-wide "Commonwealth," released this past September, gives a full album side to each band member, to do with as they will. "We just thought it would be a fun thing, and if any band could do it, we have positioned ourselves to be that band," Murphy said. "The number of bands that could really pull off a record where everyone is given an equal platform is small. Not that the whole world is listening, but those who are listening are prepared for this kind of thing from us… It's the culmination of us taking great pains to invest in each of us as songwriters, a celebration of the fact that we can do it. It's sort of a show-off move."
Ferguson, usually a guitarist, turned his side into a song cycle, with segues and connective tissue: the melody of "You Got a Lot on Your Mind," the second song, returns during "Cleopatra," his fourth song. The first of Murphy's three songs fit well together; arguably, so does the fourth, but not the fifth. Guitarist Pentland's statement is one of non-compliance: he doesn't connect the dots, but rather turns in characteristically strong individual songs. Scott, a virtuoso drummer and an excellent guitar player, created an 18-minute suite out of short fragments, with no individual markings along the way. On vinyl, "Commonwealth" doesn't have a Side One, Side Two, and so on, and digitally, they're arranged by alphabetical order by writer. Everyone gets paid equally. The sides aren't available for individual purchase. "We thought that might be our undoing," Murphy said.
Sloan arrives in Connecticut — possibly for the first time ever — on Nov. 10, when they play the Ballroom at the Outer Space in Hamden. Touring, Murphy said, happens every 18 months or so, for a few weeks at a time. "It's not like Metallica, where we're like, 'Where are we, Istanbul?' We're either in the Northeastern states, four cities in the Western States or Canada. That's basically our world at this point. We could go abroad and play nice shows in, like, Sydney, Australia or Tokyo, but it doesn't make financial sense for us." The band makes most of its money playing shows in Canada. Their profile is higher at home than here, but still fairly modest.
"Sometimes I hear people talk about us like we're massive stars in Canada, which is not true," Murphy said. "But we have been on T.V. or on the radio, so we have a band that people have heard of. We enjoy bigger shows up here and also more moneymaking opportunities... We're a band that has been on the radio for the past 20 years. But in the states: I always joke that as we travel south and our powers diminish, we're more and more of a credibility band, so if you know about us, you'll fight for us."
--taken from: Hartford Courant
by Michael Hamad
Most rock bands, even ones who claim to be democratic, have one, maybe two members who do most of the band-fronting and songwriting.
Canadian rock quartet Sloan makes consistently great records that equally represent each guy, more or less, and they've done so from around the time they started releasing albums in the early '90s. Sloan isn't paying lip service to the idea of democracy; every album has at least one song written and sung by Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland and Andrew Scott (listed here in alphabetical order). They all sing. They switch instruments.
This is not news. Writers who've covered Sloan over the years often lead with the band's democratic arrangement and enviable longevity. The band knows it.
"At this point in our music-making," Murphy, who usually plays bass or drums, said, "when we go to make a record, we ask ourselves: 'What is the hook of the album?' If you want to get written about, what do you do? We don't have that sexy a story. We have a moderate success. None of us have dated celebrities. No one is in rehab. We're not a very sexy story. The story for the past 10 years, if anybody has written anything about us, it's usually, 'How do they do it? I can't believe they're still together.'"
Another thing writers often point out: Sloan can sound like the Beatles, or Big Star, or any of the better power-pop acts with roots in the '60s or '70s. They're all, consistently, pretty great. "For better or worse, I think of my songs as being interchangeably appropriate for any record that we've done since our second record," Murphy said. "Our first record was very of-the-times: 1991, 1992. Everything from then on, we strived to make essentially timeless."
There have been other hooks in recent years. Sloan's last album, "The Double Cross," celebrated their twentieth (XX) anniversary; before that, in 2006, they released "Never Hear the End of It," with a whopping 30 songs. Sloan's latest release, the double-wide "Commonwealth," released this past September, gives a full album side to each band member, to do with as they will. "We just thought it would be a fun thing, and if any band could do it, we have positioned ourselves to be that band," Murphy said. "The number of bands that could really pull off a record where everyone is given an equal platform is small. Not that the whole world is listening, but those who are listening are prepared for this kind of thing from us… It's the culmination of us taking great pains to invest in each of us as songwriters, a celebration of the fact that we can do it. It's sort of a show-off move."
Ferguson, usually a guitarist, turned his side into a song cycle, with segues and connective tissue: the melody of "You Got a Lot on Your Mind," the second song, returns during "Cleopatra," his fourth song. The first of Murphy's three songs fit well together; arguably, so does the fourth, but not the fifth. Guitarist Pentland's statement is one of non-compliance: he doesn't connect the dots, but rather turns in characteristically strong individual songs. Scott, a virtuoso drummer and an excellent guitar player, created an 18-minute suite out of short fragments, with no individual markings along the way. On vinyl, "Commonwealth" doesn't have a Side One, Side Two, and so on, and digitally, they're arranged by alphabetical order by writer. Everyone gets paid equally. The sides aren't available for individual purchase. "We thought that might be our undoing," Murphy said.
Sloan arrives in Connecticut — possibly for the first time ever — on Nov. 10, when they play the Ballroom at the Outer Space in Hamden. Touring, Murphy said, happens every 18 months or so, for a few weeks at a time. "It's not like Metallica, where we're like, 'Where are we, Istanbul?' We're either in the Northeastern states, four cities in the Western States or Canada. That's basically our world at this point. We could go abroad and play nice shows in, like, Sydney, Australia or Tokyo, but it doesn't make financial sense for us." The band makes most of its money playing shows in Canada. Their profile is higher at home than here, but still fairly modest.
"Sometimes I hear people talk about us like we're massive stars in Canada, which is not true," Murphy said. "But we have been on T.V. or on the radio, so we have a band that people have heard of. We enjoy bigger shows up here and also more moneymaking opportunities... We're a band that has been on the radio for the past 20 years. But in the states: I always joke that as we travel south and our powers diminish, we're more and more of a credibility band, so if you know about us, you'll fight for us."
--taken from: Hartford Courant
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Four of a Kind: A Breakdown of Sloan's 'Commonwealth'
--taken from: PopMatters
by Aaron Pinto
Over a year ago, rumor had it that Sloan’s next release would see the four members going solo and releasing the material under the Sloan name. For a band that has enough pressure to maintain the overall high quality of its career output every time it makes an album, taking this route would surely be a high-risk venture: historically, it had never been pulled off with success.
In 1978, the four members of KISS released four solo albums on the same day, all under the KISS moniker. Like The Beatles, KISS had two guys who wrote most of the songs, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley; one guy who wrote fewer songs, Ace Frehley; and one guy who really couldn’t write songs, but wrote one or two anyway, Peter Criss. But the Beatles never even split these songwriting duties equally on any one album, much less on four full-length solo ones.
The KISS solo albums ended up a financial disaster, selling only one fifth of the total albums that were shipped. They were also critically incongruous—Stanley’s and Frehley’s were seen as continuations of the hard-rock KISS sound, Simmons’s was seen as musically diverse, Criss’s was seen as a 12” Frisbee. In the end, none of them were considered bona fide classics. But the reason they really failed is because four full-length LPs, whether they’re written by four great songwriters or 1978 KISS, was and will always be too much music for anyone to digest at once.
But Sloan (who, as it so happens, is a big fan of KISS) knew two things before setting out to make its version. First, if any band is capable of doing the “four solo albums under one band name” thing successfully, it is Sloan, as it had been making its albums like this, except shuffling the songs up, for its whole career. Second, the group wasn’t going to repeat KISS’s mistake of releasing four full-length solo LPs. No, Sloan was instead going to utilize the double LP format (with which it already had success) to echo the solo nature of the 1978 KISS albums. In other words, Sloan would release a double album where each member would get an entire side of vinyl for his songs.
This was all officially confirmed in July of 2014, when Sloan issued the press release and cover art for their 11th studio LP, the solo-sided double album, aptly titled Commonwealth.
The album cover alone was enough to whet the appetite. As opposed to the usual Sloan album sleeve of a picture of the band, plus a color scheme, this one featured a detail-oriented collage of items, like a more-aesthetically organized page from an I Spy book. We see various photos, a receipt, a 7” record, an unfinished crossword puzzle, dice, shark teeth, pins, and a locket, all meticulously strewn about. Fanned out on top of this backdrop at the focal point are the members of Sloan, depicted as the four kings in a set of playing cards: Jay as the King of Diamonds, Chris as the King of Hearts, Patrick as the King of Shamrocks, and Andrew as the King of Spades. The finishing touch is the purple pin right above the cards, which displays the band’s name and the album’s title in a formal script typeface. The whole thing looks magnificent.
But this characterization actually serves a purpose beyond mere novelty: by assigning each member a different card suit, Sloan devised a unique interactive sequencing experience. If you buy Commonwealth in its intended format of vinyl, you will notice that there is no Side 1-4 or Side A-D, but rather four sides labeled by the four suits assigned to each member on the cover. The order in which you choose to listen to the four sides is the intended order of listening, which may be a first in double-LP history. The diamond, the heart, the shamrock, and the spade are like Sloan’s version of the Led Zeppelin IV symbols, or Prince’s Love Symbol, except these serve a practical purpose. That said, most will probably listen to it in the order that the single-CD offers, which is alphabetically by last name. But as luck would have it, this alphabetical sequence actually ends up working the best—with Jay’s under-two-minute-long band fight song “We’ve Come This Far” to kick things off, and Andrew’s majestic 17-minute long suite, “Forty-Eight Portraits”, as the closing act, you will be hard-pressed to figure out a more enjoyable listening order.
Diamond Side: With a full side of vinyl each to curate, the guys in Sloan were awarded the rare opportunity to run wild for longer than the length of one song and choose exactly how they wanted their contributions to line up next to one another. On his Diamond side, Jay Ferguson chose to make a miniature-scale album, a compact suite of tracks bleeding into one another, with a distinct opening song, closing song and centerpiece song, not to mention an unofficial reprise and a variety of vintage styles. Simply put, it’s the finest work Jay has ever contributed to a Sloan album. And by listening to Commonwealth’s sides in last name alphabetical order, you’ll hear Ferguson’s side first, a distinction that acts as a nice feather in his patrol cap, as he was the only remaining member in Sloan to have never received the opening slot on an album. For that reason alone, his Diamond side should always be the first one you listen to.
But a better reason would be how well his side’s opening track works as an opener to the whole album. “We’ve Come This Far” serves as a mission statement for the long history of Sloan, as well as a justification for releasing an album like this. With just three self-referential verses (“Keeping track of our own text / Are we charmed or are we vexed? Does history or vanity decide?”), and a dirty Lennon-esque guitar solo, “We’ve Come This Far” is over after 1:23, seamlessly transitioning into track two, the sunny-side-up “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind”.
With its soft musical bedding, bright harmonies, and immediate sing-along nature, “You’ve Got A Lot on Your Mind” sounds like the best song Wings never released, even humorously nodding to Sir Paul with the refrain “P.S. I like you”. This is only further authenticated by Chris Murphy’s ever-adventurous bass playing, which is the unsung hero of every Sloan song. Unlike KISS’s solo ventures, you can hear each member of Sloan lending his talent in some way on almost every track—musically, vocally, influentially—regardless of who penned it.
After the last chorus of “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind” takes a bow, the show carries on with the elegant piano drama of “Three Sisters”. Sounding like a black-tie casino version of George Harrison’s Beatle swan song, “Something” (that’s three Beatles Jay has emulated in just three songs), “Three Sisters” acts not only as the focal point of Jay’s side, but also as the focal point of his entire songwriting career so far. Lyrically, it’s one of his best—the expertly-crafted double entendre of the line “She played a diamond where her heart should be” is classic. Muusically, the track blows down the doors, thanks to Andrew Scott’s deceptively simple drumming, Murphy’s high-register low-end, and a ripping guitar solo out of left field. A song like this takes Sloan’s already high-standing as a band and lifts it up another step, away from everyone else.
“Cleopatra”, one of Jay’s fastest songs yet, finds him showing off his admiration for the gritty music released on Stiff Records, while still retaining the sweetness of his Beach Boy-influenced melodic sensibility. The song is already good enough when, out of nowhere, Jay stealthily drops a reprise of “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind” before the last verse.
The Diamond side closes with “Neither Here Nor There”, a gorgeously lush acoustic ditty on new love, clocking in at just over two minutes. After Jay’s side, you feel like you’ve experienced a perfect full-length album, even though it was only five songs. And with the last line ringing in your head, the last word of which is “heart”, you gear up for what can only be a spectacular side of the same name by Sloan’s most consistently-skilled songwriter, Chris Murphy.
Heart Side: With time on his side, Murphy wastes none of it: the instantly catchy and instantly rocking “Carried Away”, opens his set. This is one of several songs in Murphy’s back catalog with a distinctly “Go Your Own Way” flavor to it, and it might be the best of them. Lyrically, it tells an engaging story about an open relationship gone awry, acting as a sequel to Sloan’s 2001 Murphy-penned classic, “The Other Man”, which chronicled his struggle of getting involved with a taken woman. In one interpretation of its lyrics, “Carried Away” depicts Murphy going on to finally win her love, agreeing to an open relationship with her, then getting served a plate of poetic justice when she sleeps with another guy and develops feelings for him. An alternate reading of its lyrics puts the listener in the same setting as “The Other Man”, but instead of hearing from Murphy’s side of the love triangle, we hear from the perspective of the original male character, who loses his woman after Murphy—who initially came along as a friend of hers—turned into her new romantic partner, thanks to the nature of her open relationship. Or, you could isolate the lyrics entirely from the narrative of “The Other Man”. Whichever interpretation you go with will make for a lyrically satisfying listen. But even if the lyrics were about something else entirely, the song would still flourish because of its melodic peaks, rhythmic dropouts, and not least of all, the production, which blends acoustic and electric guitars, bass, electric piano, drums, and strings in a way that sounds perfectly streamlined and not cluttered.
The next tune brings down the pace but not the quality—“So Far So Good” is another piano-driven ode to the complexities of life by Murphy, having done so before on Never Hear the End of It’s “Live the Life You’re Dreaming Of”. But this time around, he wraps the ballad in barbed wire instead of a bow. Both musically and lyrically, “So Far So Good” sounds like the result of “Hey Jude” cross-pollinating with “Sexy Sadie”. “Better get on with it / You know who I’m talking to”, sings Murphy, “Changing this world’s up to you”. Translation: the movement you need is on your shoulder, so take a sad song and make it better; if not, you’ll get yours yet, however big you think you are. Throughout the cut, Murphy provides a particularly strong vocal, belting it out during the second section, and then sticking the landing on return to the first. The song concludes with a cosmic outro, featuring the band singing wordless, bubble-like church bell vocals that float away and quickly burst into thin air.
A sustained organ note smoothly transitions “So Far So Good” into the shortest song on Murphy’s side, “Get Out”, a sinister shuffle with another brilliant vocal, this time featuring a prominent Jay Ferguson on backup. The bass riffs are rapturous, as are those of the lead guitar. And “Get Out” is just one of the many songs on Commonwealth enhanced by the piano prowess of Gregory Macdonald, who returns to lend a hand with musical bits, as well as helping the band and sound whiz Ryan Haslett with the album’s production. On its back cover, a continuation of the collage on the front, Macdonald appears as the deck’s Joker, but he really should have been pictured as a Jack: he is truly Sloan’s Jack of all musical trades.
“Misty’s Beside Herself” comes next, and acts as a softer break between harder-edged songs, though its chorus still manages to rock pretty hard thanks to a chunky rhythm anchored by Andrew Scott’s authoritative drumming. The song’s breakdown, wherein everything drops out except the piano and Murphy’s single-tracked chorus vocal, is an especially nice touch, a zag where lesser bands would zig.
The last song on the Chris Murphy side, “You Don’t Need Excuses to Be Good”, easily slides into the top ten of his career. The lyrics tell the story of a boy who has lofty dreams—presumably those of athletic, theatrical, or musical stardom—talking to a cynical woman who believes they are impractical for the “real” world. When she decides to bluntly verbalize this opinion to the boy, he understandably bursts into tears. Murphy, once a kid with big dreams of his own, swoops in and urges the boy to keep his curiosity and work hard towards his dreams instead of just wishing they’ll come true. He then calls on our culture to ditch the woman’s condescending attitude and adopt a more supportive one like his: if you’re good at something, you shouldn’t have to curb it for anyone. It’s a really considerate message by Murphy, who, not coincidentally, has two boys of his own.
But what good are good lyrics without great music? “You Don’t Need Excuses to Be Good” just happens to rock harder than past Murphy heavies like “Underwhelmed” or “She Says What She Means”, yet has more finesse than either, showcasing a Rush/Police-influenced verse and a walloping glam-rock chorus. But just when you think that it’s time to head back to the verses, Murphy flips the script entirely and segues into a zealous foot-stomping call-and-response Revolver-esque tornado of hooks for an even more exciting second chorus. After another round of verses and choruses, Murphy ends the song with a ferocious guitar solo a la McCartney’s on “Taxman”, finishing off the Heart side with pizazz.
--taken from: PopMatters
by Aaron Pinto
Over a year ago, rumor had it that Sloan’s next release would see the four members going solo and releasing the material under the Sloan name. For a band that has enough pressure to maintain the overall high quality of its career output every time it makes an album, taking this route would surely be a high-risk venture: historically, it had never been pulled off with success.
In 1978, the four members of KISS released four solo albums on the same day, all under the KISS moniker. Like The Beatles, KISS had two guys who wrote most of the songs, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley; one guy who wrote fewer songs, Ace Frehley; and one guy who really couldn’t write songs, but wrote one or two anyway, Peter Criss. But the Beatles never even split these songwriting duties equally on any one album, much less on four full-length solo ones.
The KISS solo albums ended up a financial disaster, selling only one fifth of the total albums that were shipped. They were also critically incongruous—Stanley’s and Frehley’s were seen as continuations of the hard-rock KISS sound, Simmons’s was seen as musically diverse, Criss’s was seen as a 12” Frisbee. In the end, none of them were considered bona fide classics. But the reason they really failed is because four full-length LPs, whether they’re written by four great songwriters or 1978 KISS, was and will always be too much music for anyone to digest at once.
But Sloan (who, as it so happens, is a big fan of KISS) knew two things before setting out to make its version. First, if any band is capable of doing the “four solo albums under one band name” thing successfully, it is Sloan, as it had been making its albums like this, except shuffling the songs up, for its whole career. Second, the group wasn’t going to repeat KISS’s mistake of releasing four full-length solo LPs. No, Sloan was instead going to utilize the double LP format (with which it already had success) to echo the solo nature of the 1978 KISS albums. In other words, Sloan would release a double album where each member would get an entire side of vinyl for his songs.
This was all officially confirmed in July of 2014, when Sloan issued the press release and cover art for their 11th studio LP, the solo-sided double album, aptly titled Commonwealth.
The album cover alone was enough to whet the appetite. As opposed to the usual Sloan album sleeve of a picture of the band, plus a color scheme, this one featured a detail-oriented collage of items, like a more-aesthetically organized page from an I Spy book. We see various photos, a receipt, a 7” record, an unfinished crossword puzzle, dice, shark teeth, pins, and a locket, all meticulously strewn about. Fanned out on top of this backdrop at the focal point are the members of Sloan, depicted as the four kings in a set of playing cards: Jay as the King of Diamonds, Chris as the King of Hearts, Patrick as the King of Shamrocks, and Andrew as the King of Spades. The finishing touch is the purple pin right above the cards, which displays the band’s name and the album’s title in a formal script typeface. The whole thing looks magnificent.
But this characterization actually serves a purpose beyond mere novelty: by assigning each member a different card suit, Sloan devised a unique interactive sequencing experience. If you buy Commonwealth in its intended format of vinyl, you will notice that there is no Side 1-4 or Side A-D, but rather four sides labeled by the four suits assigned to each member on the cover. The order in which you choose to listen to the four sides is the intended order of listening, which may be a first in double-LP history. The diamond, the heart, the shamrock, and the spade are like Sloan’s version of the Led Zeppelin IV symbols, or Prince’s Love Symbol, except these serve a practical purpose. That said, most will probably listen to it in the order that the single-CD offers, which is alphabetically by last name. But as luck would have it, this alphabetical sequence actually ends up working the best—with Jay’s under-two-minute-long band fight song “We’ve Come This Far” to kick things off, and Andrew’s majestic 17-minute long suite, “Forty-Eight Portraits”, as the closing act, you will be hard-pressed to figure out a more enjoyable listening order.
Diamond Side: With a full side of vinyl each to curate, the guys in Sloan were awarded the rare opportunity to run wild for longer than the length of one song and choose exactly how they wanted their contributions to line up next to one another. On his Diamond side, Jay Ferguson chose to make a miniature-scale album, a compact suite of tracks bleeding into one another, with a distinct opening song, closing song and centerpiece song, not to mention an unofficial reprise and a variety of vintage styles. Simply put, it’s the finest work Jay has ever contributed to a Sloan album. And by listening to Commonwealth’s sides in last name alphabetical order, you’ll hear Ferguson’s side first, a distinction that acts as a nice feather in his patrol cap, as he was the only remaining member in Sloan to have never received the opening slot on an album. For that reason alone, his Diamond side should always be the first one you listen to.
But a better reason would be how well his side’s opening track works as an opener to the whole album. “We’ve Come This Far” serves as a mission statement for the long history of Sloan, as well as a justification for releasing an album like this. With just three self-referential verses (“Keeping track of our own text / Are we charmed or are we vexed? Does history or vanity decide?”), and a dirty Lennon-esque guitar solo, “We’ve Come This Far” is over after 1:23, seamlessly transitioning into track two, the sunny-side-up “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind”.
With its soft musical bedding, bright harmonies, and immediate sing-along nature, “You’ve Got A Lot on Your Mind” sounds like the best song Wings never released, even humorously nodding to Sir Paul with the refrain “P.S. I like you”. This is only further authenticated by Chris Murphy’s ever-adventurous bass playing, which is the unsung hero of every Sloan song. Unlike KISS’s solo ventures, you can hear each member of Sloan lending his talent in some way on almost every track—musically, vocally, influentially—regardless of who penned it.
After the last chorus of “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind” takes a bow, the show carries on with the elegant piano drama of “Three Sisters”. Sounding like a black-tie casino version of George Harrison’s Beatle swan song, “Something” (that’s three Beatles Jay has emulated in just three songs), “Three Sisters” acts not only as the focal point of Jay’s side, but also as the focal point of his entire songwriting career so far. Lyrically, it’s one of his best—the expertly-crafted double entendre of the line “She played a diamond where her heart should be” is classic. Muusically, the track blows down the doors, thanks to Andrew Scott’s deceptively simple drumming, Murphy’s high-register low-end, and a ripping guitar solo out of left field. A song like this takes Sloan’s already high-standing as a band and lifts it up another step, away from everyone else.
“Cleopatra”, one of Jay’s fastest songs yet, finds him showing off his admiration for the gritty music released on Stiff Records, while still retaining the sweetness of his Beach Boy-influenced melodic sensibility. The song is already good enough when, out of nowhere, Jay stealthily drops a reprise of “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind” before the last verse.
The Diamond side closes with “Neither Here Nor There”, a gorgeously lush acoustic ditty on new love, clocking in at just over two minutes. After Jay’s side, you feel like you’ve experienced a perfect full-length album, even though it was only five songs. And with the last line ringing in your head, the last word of which is “heart”, you gear up for what can only be a spectacular side of the same name by Sloan’s most consistently-skilled songwriter, Chris Murphy.
Heart Side: With time on his side, Murphy wastes none of it: the instantly catchy and instantly rocking “Carried Away”, opens his set. This is one of several songs in Murphy’s back catalog with a distinctly “Go Your Own Way” flavor to it, and it might be the best of them. Lyrically, it tells an engaging story about an open relationship gone awry, acting as a sequel to Sloan’s 2001 Murphy-penned classic, “The Other Man”, which chronicled his struggle of getting involved with a taken woman. In one interpretation of its lyrics, “Carried Away” depicts Murphy going on to finally win her love, agreeing to an open relationship with her, then getting served a plate of poetic justice when she sleeps with another guy and develops feelings for him. An alternate reading of its lyrics puts the listener in the same setting as “The Other Man”, but instead of hearing from Murphy’s side of the love triangle, we hear from the perspective of the original male character, who loses his woman after Murphy—who initially came along as a friend of hers—turned into her new romantic partner, thanks to the nature of her open relationship. Or, you could isolate the lyrics entirely from the narrative of “The Other Man”. Whichever interpretation you go with will make for a lyrically satisfying listen. But even if the lyrics were about something else entirely, the song would still flourish because of its melodic peaks, rhythmic dropouts, and not least of all, the production, which blends acoustic and electric guitars, bass, electric piano, drums, and strings in a way that sounds perfectly streamlined and not cluttered.
The next tune brings down the pace but not the quality—“So Far So Good” is another piano-driven ode to the complexities of life by Murphy, having done so before on Never Hear the End of It’s “Live the Life You’re Dreaming Of”. But this time around, he wraps the ballad in barbed wire instead of a bow. Both musically and lyrically, “So Far So Good” sounds like the result of “Hey Jude” cross-pollinating with “Sexy Sadie”. “Better get on with it / You know who I’m talking to”, sings Murphy, “Changing this world’s up to you”. Translation: the movement you need is on your shoulder, so take a sad song and make it better; if not, you’ll get yours yet, however big you think you are. Throughout the cut, Murphy provides a particularly strong vocal, belting it out during the second section, and then sticking the landing on return to the first. The song concludes with a cosmic outro, featuring the band singing wordless, bubble-like church bell vocals that float away and quickly burst into thin air.
A sustained organ note smoothly transitions “So Far So Good” into the shortest song on Murphy’s side, “Get Out”, a sinister shuffle with another brilliant vocal, this time featuring a prominent Jay Ferguson on backup. The bass riffs are rapturous, as are those of the lead guitar. And “Get Out” is just one of the many songs on Commonwealth enhanced by the piano prowess of Gregory Macdonald, who returns to lend a hand with musical bits, as well as helping the band and sound whiz Ryan Haslett with the album’s production. On its back cover, a continuation of the collage on the front, Macdonald appears as the deck’s Joker, but he really should have been pictured as a Jack: he is truly Sloan’s Jack of all musical trades.
“Misty’s Beside Herself” comes next, and acts as a softer break between harder-edged songs, though its chorus still manages to rock pretty hard thanks to a chunky rhythm anchored by Andrew Scott’s authoritative drumming. The song’s breakdown, wherein everything drops out except the piano and Murphy’s single-tracked chorus vocal, is an especially nice touch, a zag where lesser bands would zig.
The last song on the Chris Murphy side, “You Don’t Need Excuses to Be Good”, easily slides into the top ten of his career. The lyrics tell the story of a boy who has lofty dreams—presumably those of athletic, theatrical, or musical stardom—talking to a cynical woman who believes they are impractical for the “real” world. When she decides to bluntly verbalize this opinion to the boy, he understandably bursts into tears. Murphy, once a kid with big dreams of his own, swoops in and urges the boy to keep his curiosity and work hard towards his dreams instead of just wishing they’ll come true. He then calls on our culture to ditch the woman’s condescending attitude and adopt a more supportive one like his: if you’re good at something, you shouldn’t have to curb it for anyone. It’s a really considerate message by Murphy, who, not coincidentally, has two boys of his own.
But what good are good lyrics without great music? “You Don’t Need Excuses to Be Good” just happens to rock harder than past Murphy heavies like “Underwhelmed” or “She Says What She Means”, yet has more finesse than either, showcasing a Rush/Police-influenced verse and a walloping glam-rock chorus. But just when you think that it’s time to head back to the verses, Murphy flips the script entirely and segues into a zealous foot-stomping call-and-response Revolver-esque tornado of hooks for an even more exciting second chorus. After another round of verses and choruses, Murphy ends the song with a ferocious guitar solo a la McCartney’s on “Taxman”, finishing off the Heart side with pizazz.
--taken from: PopMatters
Sloan attracts young and old to Commodore
--taken from: The Peak
Playing songs from albums old and new, Sloan still rocks
by Tessa Perkins
For their new album, Commonwealth, each member of Sloan helms one side of the record representing the four suits of a deck of cards. The band has always collaborated on songwriting, and on this album each of them has a chance to be the front man. In this same spirit, their live show had the band members switching places and sharing the limelight.
They began playing the Spade side of the record, followed by the Shamrock, Diamond, and Heart sides, with older songs in between such as “It’s Plain to See” and “Unkind” from Double Cross. “Unkind” had the crowd clapping along to the beat and singing the infectious lyrics.
From Jay Ferguson’s Diamond side of Commonwealth, they played “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind” which fit right in with their older hits and had the crowd nodding along in approval. This moved right into the following song off the record that references the theme of the album directly with lyrics like “She played a diamond where a heart should land” and “The house will always win.” This is a very well written song, and sounds as though Sloan just crossed the pond from Britain.
Of course, the members of Sloan are not from Britain, but from Halifax, and are now based in Toronto. Their patriotic side comes out on “The Rest of My Life” as they sing “One thing I know about the rest of my life, I know that I’ll be living it in Canada.” Screaming that along with everyone brought me back to Canada Day a few years ago when Sloan performed in Surrey.
Chris Murphy’s Heart side has a different tone, but it suits the band nonetheless. Songs like “Carried Away” were very easy to sing along to. They brought out “Believe in Me” from 1988, and the older fans in the crowd were very pleased.
The range in audience ages was really nice to see at this show, as Sloan have managed to keep their fans from the ‘90s while also attracting some new fans along the way. Maybe not everyone could relate when they sang “I Hate My Generation,” but everyone enjoyed this 1994 hit.
After taking a break, the band came back for round two and got everyone pumped back up with their 2001 hit, “If It Feels Good Do It.” “Misty’s Beside Herself” from the Heart side of Commonwealth slowed the pace down, and then they switched gears once again to play one of my favourites, “Who Taught You To Live Like That?” and “Ill placed trust” from 2006’s Never Hear the End of It.
With such a large discography, the band has a lot of material to draw on, and they played a well-rounded and lengthy set. Before the encore, they played two more that everyone could sing along to: “The Other Man” and “Money City Maniacs.”
They thanked the crowd for allowing them to do an encore, and expressed that they still love that feeling of being called back on stage. The group is still humble, and clearly loves making great rock music. They ended the night with the first song off Commonwealth, “We’ve Come This Far,” “The Marquee and the Moon,” and “She Says What She Means.” It was a fitting way to end a night of visiting their extensive discography.
--taken from: The Peak
Playing songs from albums old and new, Sloan still rocks
by Tessa Perkins
For their new album, Commonwealth, each member of Sloan helms one side of the record representing the four suits of a deck of cards. The band has always collaborated on songwriting, and on this album each of them has a chance to be the front man. In this same spirit, their live show had the band members switching places and sharing the limelight.
They began playing the Spade side of the record, followed by the Shamrock, Diamond, and Heart sides, with older songs in between such as “It’s Plain to See” and “Unkind” from Double Cross. “Unkind” had the crowd clapping along to the beat and singing the infectious lyrics.
From Jay Ferguson’s Diamond side of Commonwealth, they played “You’ve Got a Lot on Your Mind” which fit right in with their older hits and had the crowd nodding along in approval. This moved right into the following song off the record that references the theme of the album directly with lyrics like “She played a diamond where a heart should land” and “The house will always win.” This is a very well written song, and sounds as though Sloan just crossed the pond from Britain.
Of course, the members of Sloan are not from Britain, but from Halifax, and are now based in Toronto. Their patriotic side comes out on “The Rest of My Life” as they sing “One thing I know about the rest of my life, I know that I’ll be living it in Canada.” Screaming that along with everyone brought me back to Canada Day a few years ago when Sloan performed in Surrey.
Chris Murphy’s Heart side has a different tone, but it suits the band nonetheless. Songs like “Carried Away” were very easy to sing along to. They brought out “Believe in Me” from 1988, and the older fans in the crowd were very pleased.
The range in audience ages was really nice to see at this show, as Sloan have managed to keep their fans from the ‘90s while also attracting some new fans along the way. Maybe not everyone could relate when they sang “I Hate My Generation,” but everyone enjoyed this 1994 hit.
After taking a break, the band came back for round two and got everyone pumped back up with their 2001 hit, “If It Feels Good Do It.” “Misty’s Beside Herself” from the Heart side of Commonwealth slowed the pace down, and then they switched gears once again to play one of my favourites, “Who Taught You To Live Like That?” and “Ill placed trust” from 2006’s Never Hear the End of It.
With such a large discography, the band has a lot of material to draw on, and they played a well-rounded and lengthy set. Before the encore, they played two more that everyone could sing along to: “The Other Man” and “Money City Maniacs.”
They thanked the crowd for allowing them to do an encore, and expressed that they still love that feeling of being called back on stage. The group is still humble, and clearly loves making great rock music. They ended the night with the first song off Commonwealth, “We’ve Come This Far,” “The Marquee and the Moon,” and “She Says What She Means.” It was a fitting way to end a night of visiting their extensive discography.
--taken from: The Peak
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Sloan Picks Up Where the Beatles Left Off
--taken from: PopMatters
by Aaron Pinto
One could readily make a strong argument that the Beatles are the greatest band ever. For starters, they were among the first to both write and perform their own original material; before them, most bands just performed songs written for them by a songwriting team. If that wasn’t enough, in just seven years, they released 11 full-length studio albums (or 12, or 13, depending on how you view Magical Mystery Tour and Yellow Submarine) and around 35 non-album tracks released as the respective sides of singles and extended plays, bringing their total number of original songs to a little under 200.
Not only were these songs incredible and unprecedented in their scope of melody, harmony, instrumentation, and recording techniques, but they took the world by storm. The Beatles didn’t just change music; they changed culture. How can you top that?
In short, you can’t. There will never be another Beatles. No matter how popular or idiosyncratic a band is, it will never pull off that same perfect ratio of innovation, artistic freedom, and commercial success that the Beatles did.
Think of your favorite band. No matter how good they are, they are not going to affect the culture in the same way that the Beatles did and still do, kids and parents alike dancing to their songs, teeny boppers and music scholars reaching for the same album in the record store bin, jocks and outcasts quoting the lyrics. That level of universal acceptance would be unfathomable for a new band today.
So how do we rank every other band in comparison? To be fair, we must take out the cultural impact factor, since it is categorically impossible to top the Beatles on that front. But if we’re in agreement that the Beatles are the greatest band of all-time, then we can use a list of golden characteristics that they possessed as the measuring stick against which all other bands are sized. These characteristics, while uniquely shaped by the Beatles due to the strength of their legacy, are possible to be realized by any band. These are:
Some of the bands you listed probably possess most of them. And even more will possess a few of them. But you will come to realize that, in the 40-some years since The Beatles disbanded, no band has possessed all of them—almost no band, that is.
Meet Sloan, Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland, and Andrew Scott, who together form the Toronto-based/Halifax, Nova Scotia-formed rock quartet that has proudly carried those elusive, Beatle-esque golden characteristics for 23 years and counting.
But despite this, Sloan has somehow never enjoyed mainstream success outside of its native Canada. As a result, the majority of people have no idea who the band is. Though it’s a shame that most people have never even heard of Sloan, those who champion the group feel like they’ve been granted exclusive access to the greatest band since the Beatles; to paraphrase writer Tom Cox, “you’ve either never heard of Sloan, or you think more fondly of them than your godchildren.” Here’s how Sloan measures up with respect to the golden characteristics:
Band Identity: Sloan has maintained the same four members throughout its 20-plus years together. The day one of the members leaves the group, the band will cease to be. Sloan respects what its name represents, unlike so many bands that have no problem replacing a member at the drop of a dime.
Highlighting this feat is the fact that almost every Sloan release features their likeness on the cover; much like most albums released by the Beatles, KISS, and the Ramones, there’s an immediate sense of group solidarity before you even hear a note of music. You have no questions about who is making the music you’re about to hear. And just like it is with those bands, it’s standard fare for the fans to choose a favorite member while still loving the band as a whole.
Quantity of Albums and Songs: Sloan has released 11 albums, two EPs, and an assortment of non-album/non-EP tracks, bringing their released-song total to almost 200. They also have a triple-vinyl live album, 4 Nights at the Palais Royale, and a slew of cover versions and limited-edition vinyl goodies.
Band Democracy: All four members split the songwriting duties evenly and sing lead on their own songs. Generally, a given song will feature all four members playing and singing in some capacity, regardless of who wrote it. In this sense, you could make the argument that Sloan actually surpasses the Beatles because the Fab Four were really only a Fab Three when it came to songwriting. Etching Sloan’s democracy in stone is a line you will find in the booklet of each and every one of their releases: “All songs written by Sloan.” There’s no “Lennon/McCartney” or “Jagger/Richards”-style partnership or writing credit given to any one member; the money is split evenly between Sloan’s members, and they remain perfectly intact after two decades because of it.
Live Ability: The aging of members and the complexity of the material has no negative effect whatsoever on Sloan’s consistently brilliant live show. Splitting the set evenly between the four members’ songs, Sloan always pulls off the harmonies and challenging instrumentation. The standard configuration features Patrick on lead guitar, Jay on rhythm guitar, Chris on bass, and Andrew on drums, but when Andrew performs his songs, he switches to guitar, Chris switches to drums, and Jay switches to bass. Amidst all these changes, these guys still manage to rock just as hard.
Humor: Lyrically, Sloan has always exhibited a knack for wit and wordplay, but never in a corny, overtly reference-heavy way like their more-famous peers, Fountains of Wayne, are notorious for. In interviews, Sloan’s members come off as comedians who also happen to be great musicians, never missing an opportunity to make a joke.
That leaves us with two more categories: Quality of Albums and Songs and Consistency.
Chris Murphy often likens Sloan to a mutual fund. In other words, by being a Sloan fan, you’re investing in four different creative minds, and because of this, the odds that an entire album will stink are much lower than if you invested in a band with only one songwriter, or one creative mind. And from Sloan’s first album-onward, this has been a smart investment. Every album is good; most are great, which holds especially true if you’re a fan of each member’s distinct writing style. And on their one or two lesser albums, the good songs are so amazing that they make up for the not-so-good-ones, a fact illustrated by Murphy’s “mutual fund” analogy.
So, then, it’s safe to say that the Quality of Albums and Songs is better than most bands’. You can always count on Sloan to release top-shelf albums with extraordinary songs.
Consistency: How is consistency different from Quality of Albums and Songs? Consistency has a lot to do with quality, but more so the retaining of it amidst artistic change. It involves a paradox: to be a great band, you must stay the same by consistently delivering good material, yet you must change from album to album enough so as not to repeat an album you’ve already made. Great bands never become parodies of themselves. Again, this is the template laid out by the Beatles: Each album (a) is the next logical step forward from the prior one (b) has a unique feel, and (c) is of the utmost quality. Sloan’s consistency along all of these lines is impeccable.
Twenty-three years after they first stepped foot on the battlefield, Sloan still reigns victorious in the fight for supremacy among active bands. When matched against their contemporaries, it’s not even close; Sloan has outdone and outlived almost every band that started around the time it did in 1991. And how many other active bands have put out such a wealth of consistently good music with the same lineup of equally contributing members? Not many, if any. Sloan needn’t watch its throne—it’s quite clear that it will not be usurped by anyone in the foreseeable future. The only way another active band can claim the throne is if Sloan chooses to vacate it. And considering that Sloan is prospering perhaps more than ever, it seems unlikely that it will resign any time soon.
Murphy once said this in a 2013 interview:
People less and less live and die by their favorite bands but I’d like to think for the people who continue to live and die by their favorite bands that we could be—that my band Sloan could be—one of the bands they fight over or fight for. You can love or hate parts of us but I’d like to think that there are some people who have followed us the whole journey along and have favorite records or favorite eras or favorite songs. I think there might be some people who follow us that way; anyway, the prospect excites me. We’re music fans and we’re trying to make music for music fans, too.
Hopefully, he finds solace in the fact that the fans are indeed fighting for Sloan. And we’re succeeding, thanks to the compositions by their four distinct songwriters—Jay Ferguson, the sweet-voiced aficionado of ‘60s and ‘70s AM melodies; Chris Murphy, the sharp-witted wordsmith and infallible hook machine; Patrick Pentland, the resident hard rock hit man and purveyor of punk; and Andrew Scott, the electric beast poet from the Village Greenwich Preservation Society. With 11 quality studio LPs plus an abundance of top-notch non-album tracks by these guys as our weapons, few bands stand a chance.
This is part one of a three-part retrospective on the work of Sloan.
--taken from: PopMatters
by Aaron Pinto
One could readily make a strong argument that the Beatles are the greatest band ever. For starters, they were among the first to both write and perform their own original material; before them, most bands just performed songs written for them by a songwriting team. If that wasn’t enough, in just seven years, they released 11 full-length studio albums (or 12, or 13, depending on how you view Magical Mystery Tour and Yellow Submarine) and around 35 non-album tracks released as the respective sides of singles and extended plays, bringing their total number of original songs to a little under 200.
Not only were these songs incredible and unprecedented in their scope of melody, harmony, instrumentation, and recording techniques, but they took the world by storm. The Beatles didn’t just change music; they changed culture. How can you top that?
In short, you can’t. There will never be another Beatles. No matter how popular or idiosyncratic a band is, it will never pull off that same perfect ratio of innovation, artistic freedom, and commercial success that the Beatles did.
Think of your favorite band. No matter how good they are, they are not going to affect the culture in the same way that the Beatles did and still do, kids and parents alike dancing to their songs, teeny boppers and music scholars reaching for the same album in the record store bin, jocks and outcasts quoting the lyrics. That level of universal acceptance would be unfathomable for a new band today.
So how do we rank every other band in comparison? To be fair, we must take out the cultural impact factor, since it is categorically impossible to top the Beatles on that front. But if we’re in agreement that the Beatles are the greatest band of all-time, then we can use a list of golden characteristics that they possessed as the measuring stick against which all other bands are sized. These characteristics, while uniquely shaped by the Beatles due to the strength of their legacy, are possible to be realized by any band. These are:
1. The band’s lineup never changed after its first album was released.
2. Each member was indispensable and irreplaceable.
3. Each member had a distinct, unique personality.
4. Each member could sing.
5. Each member could write. (In the case of the Beatles, three did regularly.)
6. Every album is essential and different from the one before it.
7. There are enough albums to constitute a complete career, but not so many that it’s a burdensome task to listen to and keep track of them all.
8. They were a tremendous live band.
9. They cared about their band image—every album except one features each member’s likeness on the cover.
10. The band always possessed a sense of humor, be it in its lyrics or its public interactions.
11. They broke up instead of continuing and potentially tainting their band legacy with a lineup change or a bad album.
Now take a moment to make a list of bands. See how many of them possess all of these characteristics. Any of those who do will be considered the next greatest bands on the list of all-time band supremacy.
Some of the bands you listed probably possess most of them. And even more will possess a few of them. But you will come to realize that, in the 40-some years since The Beatles disbanded, no band has possessed all of them—almost no band, that is.
Meet Sloan, Jay Ferguson, Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland, and Andrew Scott, who together form the Toronto-based/Halifax, Nova Scotia-formed rock quartet that has proudly carried those elusive, Beatle-esque golden characteristics for 23 years and counting.
But despite this, Sloan has somehow never enjoyed mainstream success outside of its native Canada. As a result, the majority of people have no idea who the band is. Though it’s a shame that most people have never even heard of Sloan, those who champion the group feel like they’ve been granted exclusive access to the greatest band since the Beatles; to paraphrase writer Tom Cox, “you’ve either never heard of Sloan, or you think more fondly of them than your godchildren.” Here’s how Sloan measures up with respect to the golden characteristics:
Band Identity: Sloan has maintained the same four members throughout its 20-plus years together. The day one of the members leaves the group, the band will cease to be. Sloan respects what its name represents, unlike so many bands that have no problem replacing a member at the drop of a dime.
Highlighting this feat is the fact that almost every Sloan release features their likeness on the cover; much like most albums released by the Beatles, KISS, and the Ramones, there’s an immediate sense of group solidarity before you even hear a note of music. You have no questions about who is making the music you’re about to hear. And just like it is with those bands, it’s standard fare for the fans to choose a favorite member while still loving the band as a whole.
Quantity of Albums and Songs: Sloan has released 11 albums, two EPs, and an assortment of non-album/non-EP tracks, bringing their released-song total to almost 200. They also have a triple-vinyl live album, 4 Nights at the Palais Royale, and a slew of cover versions and limited-edition vinyl goodies.
Band Democracy: All four members split the songwriting duties evenly and sing lead on their own songs. Generally, a given song will feature all four members playing and singing in some capacity, regardless of who wrote it. In this sense, you could make the argument that Sloan actually surpasses the Beatles because the Fab Four were really only a Fab Three when it came to songwriting. Etching Sloan’s democracy in stone is a line you will find in the booklet of each and every one of their releases: “All songs written by Sloan.” There’s no “Lennon/McCartney” or “Jagger/Richards”-style partnership or writing credit given to any one member; the money is split evenly between Sloan’s members, and they remain perfectly intact after two decades because of it.
Live Ability: The aging of members and the complexity of the material has no negative effect whatsoever on Sloan’s consistently brilliant live show. Splitting the set evenly between the four members’ songs, Sloan always pulls off the harmonies and challenging instrumentation. The standard configuration features Patrick on lead guitar, Jay on rhythm guitar, Chris on bass, and Andrew on drums, but when Andrew performs his songs, he switches to guitar, Chris switches to drums, and Jay switches to bass. Amidst all these changes, these guys still manage to rock just as hard.
Humor: Lyrically, Sloan has always exhibited a knack for wit and wordplay, but never in a corny, overtly reference-heavy way like their more-famous peers, Fountains of Wayne, are notorious for. In interviews, Sloan’s members come off as comedians who also happen to be great musicians, never missing an opportunity to make a joke.
That leaves us with two more categories: Quality of Albums and Songs and Consistency.
Chris Murphy often likens Sloan to a mutual fund. In other words, by being a Sloan fan, you’re investing in four different creative minds, and because of this, the odds that an entire album will stink are much lower than if you invested in a band with only one songwriter, or one creative mind. And from Sloan’s first album-onward, this has been a smart investment. Every album is good; most are great, which holds especially true if you’re a fan of each member’s distinct writing style. And on their one or two lesser albums, the good songs are so amazing that they make up for the not-so-good-ones, a fact illustrated by Murphy’s “mutual fund” analogy.
So, then, it’s safe to say that the Quality of Albums and Songs is better than most bands’. You can always count on Sloan to release top-shelf albums with extraordinary songs.
Consistency: How is consistency different from Quality of Albums and Songs? Consistency has a lot to do with quality, but more so the retaining of it amidst artistic change. It involves a paradox: to be a great band, you must stay the same by consistently delivering good material, yet you must change from album to album enough so as not to repeat an album you’ve already made. Great bands never become parodies of themselves. Again, this is the template laid out by the Beatles: Each album (a) is the next logical step forward from the prior one (b) has a unique feel, and (c) is of the utmost quality. Sloan’s consistency along all of these lines is impeccable.
Twenty-three years after they first stepped foot on the battlefield, Sloan still reigns victorious in the fight for supremacy among active bands. When matched against their contemporaries, it’s not even close; Sloan has outdone and outlived almost every band that started around the time it did in 1991. And how many other active bands have put out such a wealth of consistently good music with the same lineup of equally contributing members? Not many, if any. Sloan needn’t watch its throne—it’s quite clear that it will not be usurped by anyone in the foreseeable future. The only way another active band can claim the throne is if Sloan chooses to vacate it. And considering that Sloan is prospering perhaps more than ever, it seems unlikely that it will resign any time soon.
Murphy once said this in a 2013 interview:
People less and less live and die by their favorite bands but I’d like to think for the people who continue to live and die by their favorite bands that we could be—that my band Sloan could be—one of the bands they fight over or fight for. You can love or hate parts of us but I’d like to think that there are some people who have followed us the whole journey along and have favorite records or favorite eras or favorite songs. I think there might be some people who follow us that way; anyway, the prospect excites me. We’re music fans and we’re trying to make music for music fans, too.
Hopefully, he finds solace in the fact that the fans are indeed fighting for Sloan. And we’re succeeding, thanks to the compositions by their four distinct songwriters—Jay Ferguson, the sweet-voiced aficionado of ‘60s and ‘70s AM melodies; Chris Murphy, the sharp-witted wordsmith and infallible hook machine; Patrick Pentland, the resident hard rock hit man and purveyor of punk; and Andrew Scott, the electric beast poet from the Village Greenwich Preservation Society. With 11 quality studio LPs plus an abundance of top-notch non-album tracks by these guys as our weapons, few bands stand a chance.
This is part one of a three-part retrospective on the work of Sloan.
--taken from: PopMatters
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Sloan finds common ground
--taken from: Vancouver 24 Hrs
by Joe Leary
A venerable force in Canadian music for over two decades, Sloan is a Juno Award-winning rock quartet from Halifax, N.S. Upon release of their latest CD, Commonwealth, Joe Leary spent 24 Seconds with singer Chris Murphy.
24: You guys have been together over 20 years. In the beginning, what was your initial expectation? Did you see it as something you would dedicate yourself to or was it more a wait and see if this project takes off?
CM: I played in a band with Jay before Sloan called Kearney Lake Rd. We were fairly popular in Halifax. We toured up Montreal one time and up to Toronto another time and played in Montreal and Fredericton on the way. That seemed like a success. One way success would have been measured was that we knew a band called Killer Klamz that toured right across Canada to Vancouver selling their cassette and we also knew a band called Jellysishbabies that made a vinyl record and moved to Toronto. Those seemed within our grasp. When Kearney Lake Rd. broke up in 1990, I was 19 and started playing with some older guys in a roots rock band called Blackpool. They got signed to an MCA Canada subsidiary and made a record with Terry Brown, who had recorded Rush so that was a new level of success to aspire to. Sloan was started while I was playing in Blackpool and when Nirvana released Nevermind in September 1991, there was a new level of expectation because Nirvana were playing fringe music in a fringe place and becoming well-known for it.
24: Obviously you’ve grown as artists and composers in that time. How do you feel you’ve developed over the years?
CM: The four of us write and I suppose we’re all in a constant state of changing/not changing, but talking about it as a whole is impossible. As an organism, we are the product of whatever the four of us bring to the table. That’s been the case for as long as I can remember. We started with the intention of having us all contribute songs and by 1999 we had pretty much reached equilibrium. Personally, I learned what major 7ths and minor 7ths were in 2001 and overused them for a while and still use them today. Other than that, I can’t think of how to describe a development. I think our second record was already “mature.” I suppose we went from being a band that was “of the times” on our first record to a band that attempts to make music that would be considered timeless.
24: The new record is a double disc with every member having one disc devoted to them. That’s fairly unique in the music business isn’t it?
CM: I think so. I am aware that Kiss did four solo albums. Since making Commonwealth, it has come to my attention that Emerson, Lake and Palmer did an album where they each had a section to themselves and Pink Floyd Ummagumma has selections from everyone in the band. Queen had four writers but Freddy sang them all so they weren’t exactly set up to do four solo epos the way we are. The only other bands I can think of where all of the members could do what we have done would be The Eagles and Wu Tang Clan. The Beastie Boys each had enough of a presence in the story of their band but sadly MCA died. I guess I’m not counting NKOTB, The Backstreet Boys and N’Sync. Maybe I should? OK, The Beatles had four singers, too.
24: How did you arrive at the name Commonwealth?
CM: Sloan is a (however small) “community founded for the common good,” which is how commonwealth is defined. We are a (sometimes loose) “association of common nations.” And, of course, Canada is member of the British Commonwealth. As well we are using the playing cards motif where the four of us are depicted as kings of the four suits in a deck of cards, which seems ironic as kings rule from the top down as opposed to being ruled by the people or for the common good. But we are all able to be kings because no one king is “more equal” than the others. I had a few names that we didn’t choose that were not chosen because they were playing card idioms which some of the “kings” thought was a little too “on the nose.”
--taken from: Vancouver 24 Hrs
by Joe Leary
A venerable force in Canadian music for over two decades, Sloan is a Juno Award-winning rock quartet from Halifax, N.S. Upon release of their latest CD, Commonwealth, Joe Leary spent 24 Seconds with singer Chris Murphy.
24: You guys have been together over 20 years. In the beginning, what was your initial expectation? Did you see it as something you would dedicate yourself to or was it more a wait and see if this project takes off?
CM: I played in a band with Jay before Sloan called Kearney Lake Rd. We were fairly popular in Halifax. We toured up Montreal one time and up to Toronto another time and played in Montreal and Fredericton on the way. That seemed like a success. One way success would have been measured was that we knew a band called Killer Klamz that toured right across Canada to Vancouver selling their cassette and we also knew a band called Jellysishbabies that made a vinyl record and moved to Toronto. Those seemed within our grasp. When Kearney Lake Rd. broke up in 1990, I was 19 and started playing with some older guys in a roots rock band called Blackpool. They got signed to an MCA Canada subsidiary and made a record with Terry Brown, who had recorded Rush so that was a new level of success to aspire to. Sloan was started while I was playing in Blackpool and when Nirvana released Nevermind in September 1991, there was a new level of expectation because Nirvana were playing fringe music in a fringe place and becoming well-known for it.
24: Obviously you’ve grown as artists and composers in that time. How do you feel you’ve developed over the years?
CM: The four of us write and I suppose we’re all in a constant state of changing/not changing, but talking about it as a whole is impossible. As an organism, we are the product of whatever the four of us bring to the table. That’s been the case for as long as I can remember. We started with the intention of having us all contribute songs and by 1999 we had pretty much reached equilibrium. Personally, I learned what major 7ths and minor 7ths were in 2001 and overused them for a while and still use them today. Other than that, I can’t think of how to describe a development. I think our second record was already “mature.” I suppose we went from being a band that was “of the times” on our first record to a band that attempts to make music that would be considered timeless.
24: The new record is a double disc with every member having one disc devoted to them. That’s fairly unique in the music business isn’t it?
CM: I think so. I am aware that Kiss did four solo albums. Since making Commonwealth, it has come to my attention that Emerson, Lake and Palmer did an album where they each had a section to themselves and Pink Floyd Ummagumma has selections from everyone in the band. Queen had four writers but Freddy sang them all so they weren’t exactly set up to do four solo epos the way we are. The only other bands I can think of where all of the members could do what we have done would be The Eagles and Wu Tang Clan. The Beastie Boys each had enough of a presence in the story of their band but sadly MCA died. I guess I’m not counting NKOTB, The Backstreet Boys and N’Sync. Maybe I should? OK, The Beatles had four singers, too.
24: How did you arrive at the name Commonwealth?
CM: Sloan is a (however small) “community founded for the common good,” which is how commonwealth is defined. We are a (sometimes loose) “association of common nations.” And, of course, Canada is member of the British Commonwealth. As well we are using the playing cards motif where the four of us are depicted as kings of the four suits in a deck of cards, which seems ironic as kings rule from the top down as opposed to being ruled by the people or for the common good. But we are all able to be kings because no one king is “more equal” than the others. I had a few names that we didn’t choose that were not chosen because they were playing card idioms which some of the “kings” thought was a little too “on the nose.”
--taken from: Vancouver 24 Hrs
Monday, October 20, 2014
Live Tonight: Rachael Yamagata, Mo, Tennis, Sloan
--taken from: Seattle Weekly (read more here)
For more than 20 years, Canadian power-pop outfit Sloan has consistently delivered radio-ready rock hits. Following the Beatles’ model, each member contributes to the songwriting process, which would make its latest album, Commonwealth, its version of the “White Album.” It’s divided into four parts, each member taking a turn leading the group and each side just as strong as the others. Even drummer Andrew Scott’s sprawling 17-minute closer is an easily digestible opus.
--taken from: Seattle Weekly (read more here)
For more than 20 years, Canadian power-pop outfit Sloan has consistently delivered radio-ready rock hits. Following the Beatles’ model, each member contributes to the songwriting process, which would make its latest album, Commonwealth, its version of the “White Album.” It’s divided into four parts, each member taking a turn leading the group and each side just as strong as the others. Even drummer Andrew Scott’s sprawling 17-minute closer is an easily digestible opus.
--taken from: Seattle Weekly (read more here)
Friday, October 17, 2014
Halifax band Sloan hits the road with new double CD
--taken from: Vancouver Sun
by Nick Patch
The new Sloan record, Commonwealth, distinguishes itself in many ways: it’s a double album, the second-longest of the band’s career; it’s divided into four sides, each a solo showcase for one of the quartet’s creative engines; and the final song is 18 minutes long, an Andrew Scott-penned marathon of superglued song sketches.
And despite all that, the new Sloan record essentially sounds quite a bit like a Sloan record.
Of course, that can be said of pretty much everything in their catalogue since their adolescent (if audacious) debut recordings Peppermint and Smeared came out in 1992.
Little that they’ve done since 1994’s Twice Removed has sounded much like what was going on in rock music, but it’s all sounded of a piece: sure-footed, polished power pop.
“From our second record on, it’s like, what year is that, 1981? Or 1965? Or 2008?” pointed out Chris Murphy recently, surrounded at Toronto’s Gladstone Hotel by his bandmates Scott, Jay Ferguson and Patrick Pentland.
“A lot of the songs — I don’t know about all of them — could be on any of the records. It’s fairly interchangeable. Except for a deliberate attempt to make a streamlined record on our 2003 record, Action Pact, it’s been pretty much just an eclectic, whatever you’ve got at the time (process). I could probably take all the songs that we have, which is 200 of them, and I could probably create albums out of it with different sounds or something.”
Here, Pentland interjects from a nearby couch.
“It’s odd, because ... in a weird way, you’re kind of comparing us to AC/DC or something, where every record sounds the same. And you’re probably right,” said Pentland, clad in a Jesus and Mary Chain shirt.
“But it’s four AC/DCs because we’re all doing our own sound throughout it.
“None of us have really changed our sound that much, I guess.”
The process hasn’t changed much, either. Even as Commonwealth boasts its “four solo records” conceit — which indeed winks at Kiss and their ill-fated series of solitary ego workouts — Murphy stresses that the only real difference was the track sequencing. The four members worked largely in isolation on writing their songs, but that’s what they’ve always done.
In a way, the segregated nature of their contributions sort of goes against the band’s defining narrative of democracy and unity, one that sees them evenly splitting both the mike and the money.
But it’s the way they’ve worked since the second record, and any deviations from the formula were flitting and even infamous.
“When we recorded our album Action Pact,” began Murphy, again taking aim at the 2003 record, one of only two in the band’s discography that failed to chart in Canada, “we had a producer (Tom Rothrock), which we usually don’t have. And he was really into this idea of us recording everything together. So we’d come in, he’s a real ‘vibe’ guy — like a surfer basically — put on a click, weird beat, and be like: ‘Just play something. Now you play something. All right, YOU play something.’
“And it was just,” he pauses, “garbage.”
Considering that the band, which performs Oct. 18 at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver, has always essentially been comprising four solo artists, their cohesion and consistency is surprising. Pentland attributes that in part to the fact that, individually, their tastes have been more or less unchanging since the band’s beginning.
On the other hand, Murphy says he’s been actively working to make timeless-sounding records since their distortion-contorted debut Smeared.
“I think that I spent some time being so mortified by our first album being so of the time-slash-behind the time that I was hell-bent on not feeling that way again.
“I don’t hate our first record anymore. I never really hated it. It (was just) so ‘88, but we were doing it in ‘91.”
Although their next record, 1994’s dramatically more mature and now-beloved Twice Removed, first laid down the blueprint for their sound — cheerfully lit power pop tinged with jangly psychedelia — they still hadn’t completely committed to the one-for-all thing.
“Patrick was probably trying to make songs within the confines (that) we were allowing him on that record,” Murphy pointed out. “He used to refer to Jay and me as the ‘alt gestapo.”’
“When we made that record, I thought: ‘What the (hell) are you doing? We made this record, it got us on a major label, and now you’re making a completely different record?”’ Pentland recalled.
Finally with 1996’s One Chord to Another, the band achieved egoless equality. Pentland even gave the band its first two Top 10 singles in The Good in Everyone and Everything You’ve Done Wrong (their third, and to this point final, Top 10 hit was 1998’s Money City Maniacs, also a Pentland composition).
Each member of the band agrees that Sloan wouldn’t have lasted if it couldn’t constitute a creative outlet for all four players. They’re the first to drop the “democracy” term, by the way, although Murphy wants to clarify exactly what that means.
“We’re not a democracy where (we say), ‘What do you guys think of this song?’ and then we all vote or something. It’s not like that. It’s like: ‘OK, we’re all in this. We’re all going to give ourselves. Everybody’s going to get songs, and you can do them however you want.”’
And how are disagreements handled?
“If you don’t agree with someone, but the other guys do, you just have to step away and trust that they’re making the right decision,” Pentland replied.
“Or wait and say I told you so.”
Sloan’s last full-length, 2011’s lush and punchy The Double Cross, was critically celebrated by critics in the U.S. and did better there than some of their past records.
Still, Murphy points out, “we haven’t had a pay increase in 10 years.” The band seems utterly bored by discussion of sales or broadening their audience.
“It’s hard to compete with the nostalgia people have for the songs that came out in university or whenever they were in love with life or whatever,” said Murphy. “I think the music that we’re making is just as good, but it would be naive to think it’s going to have the same kind of effect on people.
“We’ll reach some young people, but it’s mostly people who have been following us all along, and our music has already changed their world in a way our latest record won’t.”
It was in part the disappointment surrounding the much-battered Action Pact — an album fuelled by a major investment from the label, Pentland says — that crystallized a way forward, one where Sloan would double down on its Sloanness and worry less about fitting in.
“A lot of pressure came off us,” remembered Pentland. “After a while, it was just like, this isn’t going to happen. We’re not going to be superstars. So let’s just focus on being us. We don’t care about being on Letterman anymore.”
--taken from: Vancouver Sun
by Nick Patch
The new Sloan record, Commonwealth, distinguishes itself in many ways: it’s a double album, the second-longest of the band’s career; it’s divided into four sides, each a solo showcase for one of the quartet’s creative engines; and the final song is 18 minutes long, an Andrew Scott-penned marathon of superglued song sketches.
And despite all that, the new Sloan record essentially sounds quite a bit like a Sloan record.
Of course, that can be said of pretty much everything in their catalogue since their adolescent (if audacious) debut recordings Peppermint and Smeared came out in 1992.
Little that they’ve done since 1994’s Twice Removed has sounded much like what was going on in rock music, but it’s all sounded of a piece: sure-footed, polished power pop.
“From our second record on, it’s like, what year is that, 1981? Or 1965? Or 2008?” pointed out Chris Murphy recently, surrounded at Toronto’s Gladstone Hotel by his bandmates Scott, Jay Ferguson and Patrick Pentland.
“A lot of the songs — I don’t know about all of them — could be on any of the records. It’s fairly interchangeable. Except for a deliberate attempt to make a streamlined record on our 2003 record, Action Pact, it’s been pretty much just an eclectic, whatever you’ve got at the time (process). I could probably take all the songs that we have, which is 200 of them, and I could probably create albums out of it with different sounds or something.”
Here, Pentland interjects from a nearby couch.
“It’s odd, because ... in a weird way, you’re kind of comparing us to AC/DC or something, where every record sounds the same. And you’re probably right,” said Pentland, clad in a Jesus and Mary Chain shirt.
“But it’s four AC/DCs because we’re all doing our own sound throughout it.
“None of us have really changed our sound that much, I guess.”
The process hasn’t changed much, either. Even as Commonwealth boasts its “four solo records” conceit — which indeed winks at Kiss and their ill-fated series of solitary ego workouts — Murphy stresses that the only real difference was the track sequencing. The four members worked largely in isolation on writing their songs, but that’s what they’ve always done.
In a way, the segregated nature of their contributions sort of goes against the band’s defining narrative of democracy and unity, one that sees them evenly splitting both the mike and the money.
But it’s the way they’ve worked since the second record, and any deviations from the formula were flitting and even infamous.
“When we recorded our album Action Pact,” began Murphy, again taking aim at the 2003 record, one of only two in the band’s discography that failed to chart in Canada, “we had a producer (Tom Rothrock), which we usually don’t have. And he was really into this idea of us recording everything together. So we’d come in, he’s a real ‘vibe’ guy — like a surfer basically — put on a click, weird beat, and be like: ‘Just play something. Now you play something. All right, YOU play something.’
“And it was just,” he pauses, “garbage.”
Considering that the band, which performs Oct. 18 at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver, has always essentially been comprising four solo artists, their cohesion and consistency is surprising. Pentland attributes that in part to the fact that, individually, their tastes have been more or less unchanging since the band’s beginning.
On the other hand, Murphy says he’s been actively working to make timeless-sounding records since their distortion-contorted debut Smeared.
“I think that I spent some time being so mortified by our first album being so of the time-slash-behind the time that I was hell-bent on not feeling that way again.
“I don’t hate our first record anymore. I never really hated it. It (was just) so ‘88, but we were doing it in ‘91.”
Although their next record, 1994’s dramatically more mature and now-beloved Twice Removed, first laid down the blueprint for their sound — cheerfully lit power pop tinged with jangly psychedelia — they still hadn’t completely committed to the one-for-all thing.
“Patrick was probably trying to make songs within the confines (that) we were allowing him on that record,” Murphy pointed out. “He used to refer to Jay and me as the ‘alt gestapo.”’
“When we made that record, I thought: ‘What the (hell) are you doing? We made this record, it got us on a major label, and now you’re making a completely different record?”’ Pentland recalled.
Finally with 1996’s One Chord to Another, the band achieved egoless equality. Pentland even gave the band its first two Top 10 singles in The Good in Everyone and Everything You’ve Done Wrong (their third, and to this point final, Top 10 hit was 1998’s Money City Maniacs, also a Pentland composition).
Each member of the band agrees that Sloan wouldn’t have lasted if it couldn’t constitute a creative outlet for all four players. They’re the first to drop the “democracy” term, by the way, although Murphy wants to clarify exactly what that means.
“We’re not a democracy where (we say), ‘What do you guys think of this song?’ and then we all vote or something. It’s not like that. It’s like: ‘OK, we’re all in this. We’re all going to give ourselves. Everybody’s going to get songs, and you can do them however you want.”’
And how are disagreements handled?
“If you don’t agree with someone, but the other guys do, you just have to step away and trust that they’re making the right decision,” Pentland replied.
“Or wait and say I told you so.”
Sloan’s last full-length, 2011’s lush and punchy The Double Cross, was critically celebrated by critics in the U.S. and did better there than some of their past records.
Still, Murphy points out, “we haven’t had a pay increase in 10 years.” The band seems utterly bored by discussion of sales or broadening their audience.
“It’s hard to compete with the nostalgia people have for the songs that came out in university or whenever they were in love with life or whatever,” said Murphy. “I think the music that we’re making is just as good, but it would be naive to think it’s going to have the same kind of effect on people.
“We’ll reach some young people, but it’s mostly people who have been following us all along, and our music has already changed their world in a way our latest record won’t.”
It was in part the disappointment surrounding the much-battered Action Pact — an album fuelled by a major investment from the label, Pentland says — that crystallized a way forward, one where Sloan would double down on its Sloanness and worry less about fitting in.
“A lot of pressure came off us,” remembered Pentland. “After a while, it was just like, this isn’t going to happen. We’re not going to be superstars. So let’s just focus on being us. We don’t care about being on Letterman anymore.”
--taken from: Vancouver Sun
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