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Thursday, March 31, 2016

Book excerpt: Nowhere With You: The East Coast Anthems of Joel Plaskett, The Emergency and Thrush Hermit

--taken from: CBC Music (read more here)



Excerpted from Nowhere With You: The East Coast Anthems of Joel Plaskett, The Emergency and Thrush Hermit© 2016 by Josh O'Kane. All rights reserved. Published by ECW Press Ltd.

By 2003, Chris Murphy and the rest of Sloan had been living in Toronto for more than half a decade. It’d been years since Joel Plaskett had been able to regularly hang out with Murphy, his old friend, neighbour, and early career champion. Plaskett was visiting California early that year, and as it happened, Sloan was there, too, recording with Tom Rothrock, a go-to producer for Beck and Elliott Smith. So he and Murphy got together and took a drive out to Joshua Tree National Park, showing each other demos that would eventually turn into Action Pact and Truthfully, Truthfully.

One of the unfinished songs Murphy played had a catchy, repetitive chorus: “I love this town,” over and over again. It was Plaskett’s favourite, Murphy says, and the one he kept asking to hear.

When Plaskett released his second solo album, La De Da, in 2005, it was anchored, in part, by an ode to Halifax called “Love This Town.” Plaskett hardly remembers Murphy’s song of the same name. “You don’t really know, when you’re writing songs, where you’re channelling stuff from,” he says. “I’m not saying I stole the song. I didn’t. I wrote it. I think of that song as a shameless Al Tuck ripoff, to be honest.”

Plaskett doesn’t hide the influence Tuck and Murphy have had on his songwriting. “The mark of the Halifax writing and music scene that I’ve always loved and wanted to be a part of — and I think I’ve carried on that tradition — is this mix of humour and melancholy and pointedness.” The tradition, he says, recognizes the unique attitude of Halifax, and all of the Maritimes, including the region’s inherent outsider perspective, like Tuck did on songs like the pop-explosion takedown “One Day the Warner.” “There’s certain traits that I saw in writers, like Al, from P.E.I., who can mix humour and sadness. Chris had that with ‘I Am the Cancer.’ I’m not saying every song did it, but there was a general vein through the music that I really like. You write for your peers, you write for your town, and you take it seriously, but you don’t take it so seriously.”

Murphy was never happy with his original track, and it didn’t make the cut for Action Pact. Only years later did it emerge, heavily rewritten, as “All I Am Is All You’re Not,” on 2008’s Parallel Play. But the ever-sarcastic musician relished the unintended intellectual property theft, using it as an excuse to throw shade at his old scenemate. “Whenever I saw him next,” he says, “I was like, ‘Hey, I like your song. And I liked it even better when it was my song.’”

Murphy’s jabs, though, are in jest. He does love Plaskett’s song. “His story’s way better. I had a dilemma about what town to be writing about: Halifax or Toronto? I love what about Toronto — the mayor?” (Rob Ford was Toronto’s mayor at the time of this interview.) “I feel like I’m just barging in on history, because I feel like that song will go down as one of the great songs. And I had a small part in it.”



Chris Murphy (left) and Joel Plaskett in Joshua Tree National Park, Calif. (from Joel Plaskett's personal collection)

Love This Town is a song perfectly befitting Plaskett’s career, with a backstory perfectly befitting the song. It’s a collection of stories and homages from home and abroad — from Tuck’s apartment burning down, to a hat-tip to Springsteen’s “Bobby Jean,” to the long drive home from Ontario — all wrapped into a love letter to Halifax. With its balanced blend of fun and sorrow, it’s a road-show anchor and a hometown anthem. The song even takes a dig at the musicians Plaskett has watched leave Nova Scotia, which, ironically, includes Sloan. As Halifax music critic Stephen Cooke says, “It validates his decision to stay in such a beautiful way.” The song resonates with people of all stripes: in 2015, longtime federal cabinet minister Peter MacKay, a Nova Scotian, quoted it when he announced he was leaving politics. Not only does “Love This Town” exemplify everything that’s helped Plaskett build a successful career without having to leave home, it spreads that home’s gospel from coast to coast to coast. “People celebrate it,” he once said. “They have their own experiences that they relate it to. It takes on a life of its own.”

In my case, Plaskett’s music was the soundtrack for a far-too-frequent Maritime pilgrimage: to Toronto. Songs like “Love This Town” kept my neck craned eastward as I landed at Pearson, headed for a new job. Ashtray Rock felt like a rock opera set in my own backyard, except that backyard was now 1,300 kilometres away. Three became a breakup album, for both a girl and a place; the record is, after all, about leaving someone and somewhere behind.

But with enough listens — and, for a while, a mended relationship — Three’s whole picture became clearer. It’s about coming home, too, and embracing what you’ve got and where you’re from. Soon I was seeing bigger pictures across Plaskett’s whole catalogue — crystal-clear portraits of life on the east coast, of growing up there, of leaving there, of coming home. The ghost of geography infects his oeuvre, from its friendly barroom tales and harbour-town stories to too-familiar ruminations over one’s place in the world.

--taken from: CBC Music (read more here)

Sloan released ‘One Chord to Another’ 20th anniversary box set, playing LP on 2016 tour

--taken from: Brooklyn Vegan



by Bill Pearis

Canadian guitar pop royalty Sloan have announced details of their 20th anniversary box set for their third album, One Chord to Another. The set three-disc vinyl box features the original 1996 album remastered from the original tapes; an 11-track LP of unreleased 4-track and studio recordings that basically make up a “lost” album recorded between Twice Removed and OCTA; and the Live at A Sloan Party album that came with initial CD copies of the U.S. release of the album with new cover art that, like the record itself, is an homage to the Beach Boys’ “Party” LP.

There’s also a 7″ single featuring demos of songs that would appear on the album; a 32-page book with liner notes, rare photos and other memorabilia;, and a fanzine style booklet that collects actual fanzine stories on Sloan from the ’90s. The included digital download also includes demo versions of every song from One Chord to Another. It’s on sale now. and full tracklist, pics of the set, and a video featuring Sloan’s Chris Murphy and Jay Ferguson detailing the box set, are below.

Once Chord to Another is Sloan’s most overty ’60s-inspired album, drawing from The Beatles, Beach Boys, The Turtles, Zombies and other pop from the era, with some of the band’s best-loved songs, including “The Good in Everyone,” “G Turns to D,” “”Everything You’ve Done Wrong” “Nothing Left To Make Me Want To Stay” and “The Lines You Amend.” The whole record is great, it’s maybe my favorite of all their albums. You can stream the original album via Spotify below.

Like they did when the Twice Removed box set came out, Sloan will be playing One Chord to Another in full on tour this year. So far, it’s mainly Canadian dates, with a few U.S. shows on the West Coast. More U.S. dates, including ones on the East Coast, will follow this fall.

 

--taken from: Brooklyn Vegan

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Sloan, METZ among 2016 Arboretum Music Festival headliners

--taken from: CBC News



by Trevor Pritchard

Iconic Halifax pop group Sloan and Ottawa noise rockers METZ are among the headliners for this summer's Arboretum Music Festival.

Sloan will perform their seminal 1996 album One Chord To Another in its entirety as part of the eclectic indie music festival, which revealed the majority of its 2016 lineup Tuesday morning.

The album, which includes such notable songs as "Everything You've Done Wrong" and "The Lines You Amend," won the 1997 Juno Award for Best Alternative Album.

The band is marking One Chord To Another's 20th anniversary with a cross-Canada tour.

Other artists announced Tuesday morning include:
  • Arcade Fire's Jeremy Gara;
  • Alternative hip-hop artist Mykki Blanco;
  • Brooklyn-based rapper Junglepussy.
Arboretum will take place Aug. 17 to 20 at Ottawa City Hall's Marion Dewar Plaza.

--taken from: CBC News

Arboretum festival lineup includes METZ, Junglepussy, Mykki Blanco

--taken from: Ottawa Citizen



by Lynn Saxberg

Hard-hitting noisemongers Metz, veteran Can-rockers Sloan, breakout New York rapper Junglepussy and California art-rap sensation Mykki Blanco are among the acts coming to the grounds of Ottawa City Hall this summer as part of the ambitious fifth-anniversary edition of the Arboretum Festival, to be held Aug. 17-20.

City hall’s Marion Dewar Plaza is the new location for the indie festival’s main stage, their fourth home in five years. Arboretum’s managing director Stefanie Power, who has been working with the festival since creative director Rolf Klausener founded it in 2012, hopes it will become their permanent site.

“It’s interesting for us to change spaces and change the way people think about these public spaces,” Power said, “but it’s also a business and logistical challenge for us to change sites every year. We’re hoping that we can make City Hall a bit more of a home for us.”

Last year’s festivities took place on Albert Island amid controversy over the site’s status as a sacred meeting place in First Nations culture. That site was not available this year, Power said. The two previous years’ events were held at Arts Court, which is now under redevelopment. The inaugural fest took place at the Ottawa Jail hostel.

The new City Hall site is not only central and spacious, but also has a place in Ottawa music history. “A lot of people have good memories of going to Bluesfest there and discovering music,” noted Power, recalling the years that Bluesfest descended on the city hall grounds. With a projected attendance of 3,500 or so, this year’s Arboretum is a fraction the size of Bluesfest, but organizers are looking forward to having the space to expand the beer garden and offer bicycle parking.

Tuesday’s preliminary lineup announcement also includes the new electronic solo project by Arcade Fire drummer Jeremy Gara, Toronto’s electro art-punks Doomsquad, SXSW buzz act Dilly Dally, the fast-rising Halifax-based punk duo Partner, powwow artists Kina Miniwag, psych rockers Hooded Fang, indie-rock troubadour Shotgun Jimmie, Afro-Columbian innovator Lido Pimienta and the underground Toronto collective Above Top Secret.

“I think it’s ambitious and we have some really great Cancon favourites like Sloan but we also have some new and challenging artists. We’re trying to maintain that excitement and integrity,” said Power. “I’m excited that we provide a platform for some artists who don’t normally come here, like Mykki Blanco. He opened for Bjork a few years ago, but I don’t think they really route him through Ottawa so that’s exciting for us.”

An East Coast native, a personal favourite for her is the Halifax-born band Sloan, who will be celebrating the 20th anniversary of their landmark album One Chord to Another. She’s also looking forward to Junglepussy, whose Pop Montreal performance was one of Power’s concert highlights of 2015. “She’s phenomenal, a young rapper, 24 years old, who talks a lot about healthy living. The way she presents herself is inspiring and wonderful,” said Power, who also used to book acts at the now-defunct Raw Sugar Cafe.

Several independent Canadian labels will also showcase their artists at Arboretum’s day parties and club shows. Hard Drawn Dracula, Buzz Records, 88 Days of Fortune, You’ve Changed Records are confirmed, with more to be announced.

To find out the rest of the lineup, you have to wait until May when organizers plan to announce more acts, cultural talks, industry events, details on the festival village and a restaurant-driven charity component to raise money for the Ottawa Food Bank.

--taken from: Ottawa Citizen

Monday, March 14, 2016

Sloan Extend 'One Chord to Another' Anniversary Tour

--taken from: Exclaim!



by Gregory Adams

As previously reported, Sloan are taking their 1996 album One Chord to Another out on tour this year to mark its 20th anniversary. Following some recently rolled-out tour dates, the Maritimes-bred alt-pop quartet have offered up details on another clutch of concerts around Ontario.

While the first batch of "One Chord to Another 20th Anniversary Tour" dates gets underway early next month, running from Barrie, ON, towards Vancouver Island, Sloan have now added a few U.S. appearances to the schedule before heading back out to Ontario. All told, there are eight new celebratory shows taking place in the province this May, including a performance at Toronto's Phoenix Concert Theatre on May 14.

No need to worry if you're a Sloan fan further out east, as the band confirmed to Exclaim! that a third round of concert appearances as part of the tour will be revealed later this year. Those particular dates are expected to take place in the fall.

For the time being, you'll find the band's updated tour schedule down below.

The details have yet to arrive in full, but Sloan will be issuing an anniversary box set behind One Chord to Another, much like how they delivered a B-sides-loaded edition of Twice Removed in 2012. The ETA for this expanded release is still unclear.

--taken from: Exclaim!

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

An Essential Guide to Sloan

--taken from: Exclaim!



by Corey Henderson

This year marks the 25th anniversary of the formation of Sloan, the Halifax-turned-Toronto power-pop quartet. If you told them in the early days that they'd be together this long, I'm sure you'd have been greeted by a pretty big laugh. From noise rock darlings courted by major American labels (Geffen, Sub Pop) to arguably one of the most important Canadian rock acts of all time, Sloan have never really followed the classic rock narrative. In fact, they almost ended before they really had a chance after the band nearly broke up following their sophomore album — an album that would solidify their success in Canada.

Eleven albums later, Sloan have stayed the course. Every member still has an equal share in the writing of songs, trading instruments and lead vocals on stage. It doesn't really seem like they are going to stop any time soon. Chris Murphy has begun performing with TUNS, a trio of former Halifax rock greats Matt Murphy (Super Friendz) and Mike O'Neil (the Inbreds).

With such a long career, and a sizeable output of music, it's difficult to know where to begin with such a legendary cult band. Thus, we present the Essential Guide to Sloan.

Essential Albums:

5. Smeared
(1993)



Their first full-length release, Smeared, is Sloan in their fuzzy, shoegaze prime. Kicking off the record is the song that made Sloan a force to reckoned with in the early '90s rock scene, the silly and sad "Underwhelmed." Drawing inspiration from two former relationships, this is a topic from which Murphy would mine a number of great songs. The lyrics are biting, filled with jabs at both former loves as well as Murphy himself. Sonically, it's fuzzy, almost droning with the same riff chugging along the entire time. Smeared also contains Sloan's first foray into power pop, the style that would be cemented on their following records. "500 Up" has an insanely catchy riff, and crisp and clean three-part harmonies on the choruses, only very rarely veering back into the noisier sound of the record.

4. 4 Nights At the Palais Royale
(1999)



A live record can be a gamble even at the best of times. Luckily for Sloan, 4 Nights At the Palais Royale is a snapshot of a band at the height of their popularity and skill. Covering songs from their golden era, the record captures a lot of what made them so popular. It's just plain fun, loud and always just about to fall off the rails, with the audience eating it up, singing along and screaming all over the place.

Highlights include a blazing rendition of "G Turns to D" and an extended version of classic jock jam "Money City Maniacs," with a huge mid-song drum break from Andrew Scott and a ton of audience participation. 4 Nights demonstrates that Sloan are at their best when they're having fun.

3. Navy Blues
(1998)



At this point, every hockey arena in Canada comes pre-loaded with "Money City Maniacs." Navy Blues is Sloan's '70s rock album, stuffed to the brim with huge riffs and wailing guitars. "Money City Maniacs" is a how-to guide on writing great pop rock, with a massive riff and that classic Sloan wit on lines like "If you admit that you're wrong, then we'll admit that we're right." Instrumentally, the song gives plenty of room for each player, with a groovy bass line bleeding into a wild guitar solo that's followed by one of the best breakdown/build-ups in rock history.

For all the straightforward rock tunes on Navy Blues, there is also a lot of whimsy here, like the mini rock opera that is "Suppose They Close the Door." Drenched in organ, it feels like three different songs stitched together, with the spooky minor key verses moving into upbeat pop choruses that make for one of the most dynamic songs on the record. Although piano is found on a lot of Sloan releases before Navy Blues, this is the record that really embraced the instrument, especially on the tracks written by Andrew Scott, adding an almost Magical Mystery Tour vibe to tracks like "Sinking Ships" and "Seems So Heavy."

Navy Blues also contains a quiet coda at the end of the album, aptly titled "I'm Not Through With You Yet." Stripped down to just acoustic instruments, it's a melancholy counterpart to the mostly bombastic album, showing that Sloan's best tricks are not the guitar solos or drum fills, but the deft use of emotion.

2. One Chord To Another
(1996)



This is the record that almost wasn't. Coming together after the hiatus and potential end of Sloan after the Geffen ordeal, this record was recorded for $110,000 less than Twice Removed and in only two weeks — and it features Sloan at their most fun. It opens with the sound of a large crowd and the voice-over announcer welcoming Sloan to the stage on "The Good in Everyone."

The band discuss the same themes on One Chord To Another as they do on other Sloan releases — broken relationships, self-deprecation, and immaturity — but the songs have a more upbeat sense to them overall. Fuzz and dissonance are replaced with even more harmonies, acoustic instruments and heavy use of auxiliary percussion (maracas, tambourines). One Chord To Another also contains one of the best/worst breakup songs, "G Turns to D," on which the band blaze through a great pop riff while Murphy laments teaching his ex how to play guitar because now she writes songs about him. It's comedic in its hypocrisy throughout, discussing how he has already written songs about her, and especially when Murphy says that he doesn't really mind in the middle of a song about how much it upsets him. No one does passive aggression like Sloan.

Then, there's the overt Beatles influence all over the record. "Autobiography" could be the spiritual sequel to "A Day In the Life," while tracks such as "A Side Wins" and "Everything You've Done Wrong" might have sat nicely on The White Album. Jay Ferguson's "The Lines You Amend" has that distinct mid-period British Invasion vibe, falling somewhere in between Revolver-era Beatles and the Rolling Stones, with the jangly guitars, pop riffs and chugging bass line.

1. Twice Removed
(1994)



Two years after Twice Removed was released, it was voted the best Canadian album of all time by a Chart magazine readers poll, beating out stalwarts such as Joni Mitchell's Blue and Neil Young's Harvest. In the States, it was one of Spin magazine's "Best Albums That You Didn't Hear This Year." It was also the album that almost killed Sloan before they'd barely started. Geffen wasn't happy with the album they had recorded, which had traded in most of the fuzz and noise for pop hooks and vocal harmonies. With limited release in the States, Twice Removed went on to be a classic in Canada. It's Sloan's quietest record, replacing the droning distortion of Smeared with more dynamics throughout, such as on "Bells On," an ode to a former lover that goes from quiet and smirking to loud and upset. It's a record filled with sadness over lost friendship, broken promises and a feeling of not being part of the crowd.

"I Hate My Generation" seems to make public some of the tension that was going on during recording of Twice Removed, lamenting being lumped in with a bunch of people just because of the way they looked. What's noticeable is whenever they discuss the past, it is sonically happier, trading in melancholy guitar lines with bigger, more fun riffs, upping the energy and moving into a major key. This is followed up with the Andrew Scott-penned "People of the Sky," a Bob Dylan-esque pop tune that strings stanzas of poetry together with only a vocal refrain every few verses to break it up.

The highlight of the record is the oddly prophetic "Coax Me," a song about selling out for what you love, once again connecting the song to the backstage conflict going on with Geffen. Paired with a video reminiscent of the Ed Sullivan Show, "Coax Me" is particularly disarming, with its haunting vocal hooks and catchy pop chorus. It also shows a full sonic departure from Smeared, with the song featuring almost no distorted guitar. Murphy's lyricism is on point as well, penning one of the best lines in Canrock history: "It's not the band I hate, it's their fans." The song builds on the sense of isolation and separation that is found all through the aptly named Twice Removed.

What's truly amazing about Twice Removed is its timelessness. Coming on to 25 years old, it doesn't sound dated at all. The use of retro rock staples, mixed in with the slacker, lo-fi vibe of the '90s, gives the record a sense of being unstuck from time.

Further listening



There are plenty of post-1998 gems in Sloan's catalogue. 1999's Between the Bridges is a wonderful walk through the Sloan story in the form of a rock opera on which the opening medley of tracks work almost as character studies of the quartet: Andrew Scott on the whimsical, piano-laden "The N.S."; Chris Murphy on the chipper, rollicking "Beyond Me"; Jay Ferguson on the soft rock-inspired "Don't You Believe A Word"; and Patrick Pentland on his full barrel banger "Friendship." It's also worth checking out 2001's Pretty Together, particularly for bad guy anthem "The Other Man," a song about Murphy's love triangle with Feist and another member of BSS. In the song, Murphy is unapologetic with his advances, urging us to see things from his perspective.

--taken from: Exclaim!