Archive for April, 2009

The Divorcees revamped, ready to rock

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

the-divorcees.jpg

(The Divorcees, from left to right: Denis ‘Turtle’ Arsenault, Danny Roy, Alex Madsen, Brock Gallant, Jason ‘J-Byrd’ Nicholson. Photo by Chr!s Sm!th)

Moncton country band The Divorcees are releasing their sophomore record, The Last of the Free Men, tomorrow (Friday) night at the Oxygen in Moncton with special guest Samantha Robichaud opening.

As I did with the Chris Colepaugh story a little while back, there’s no point in me rehashing what I’ve already written, so go here for an interview with drummer Brock Gallant about the band’s new album.

In addition to the Moncton date, the band has several other east coast dates lined up, including:

Saturday, May 2 – W.C. Oneil Arena – St. Andrews, N.B.
Friday, May 8 – The Capital – Fredericton, N.B.
Saturday, May 9 – The Seahorse  – Halifax, N.S.
Saturday, May 16 – Teazers – Amherst, N.S.
Thursday, May 21 – Club Monte Carlo – Saint John, N.B.
Friday, June 12 – Saxbys – Riverview, N.B.
Saturday, June 13 – Paul’s Wharf – St. George, N.B.

Plaskett breaks new ground on Three

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

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(Bill Plaskett joins his son Joel on the younger Plaskett’s new album as well as his current tour. Photo by Ingram Barrs.)

“If you walk, you rust,” Joel Plaskett said, quoting a line from one of his own tunes.

It was an appropriate choice of words if there ever was one.

Plaskett graciously took some time to chat with East Coast Noise a few days ago, but he was in the middle of leaving a radio station interview to head back to Fredericton’s Playhouse theatre to do soundcheck for that night’s concert.

ECN caught him just prior, during and at the end of a cab ride, not to mention between other interviews.

Plaskett quoted the line from the tune “Run, Run, Run” off his new album Three (Maplemusic) when asked if he was always as busy as he was that afternoon.

He says it’s good to keep moving and keep changing things. Otherwise, you might just rust.

Plaskett, singer-songwriter and leader of the Joel Plaskett Emergency as well as his own solo project, just wrapped the first few east coast dates on his tour in support of Three, a triple-disc record.

It’s a huge project that has garnered him some of the best reviews of his career.

It started when Plaskett noticed that he had a handful of songs coming together where each title was one word repeated three times.

Always one to grab hold of a theme or concept and run with it, Plaskett turned that little theme into the most expansive and time-consuming album of his career. While it’s a solo record, he invited several guests to perform on the record, including singer-songwriters Rose Cousins, Ana Egge and Plaskett’s father Bill Plaskett.

Each disc is its own separate record – the first one deals with departure, the second with separation and the third with reuniting. Each disc is linked together, which Plaskett says was a challenge to accomplish.

“It was a different record to finish, to sort of see through to completion because there was just so much material,” he says. “I found that recording and composing the songs was not a big deal, you know, it was just getting it all mixed and mastered and getting the artwork done and you know, to really see it through. I wanted it to be like a special package to look good and sound good and be complete.

“It took me a long time because I had to focus essentially on three records to decide how they would be connected and how many songs I would use.”

There are 27 songs on Three, but Plaskett recorded three more which didn’t make the cut (they’re now available as a 7” single from his record label New Scotland Records). He says it was a challenge to make three records and connect them all without losing the overall focus of the project.

“Sometimes I’d have the moments where I was like, ‘Is this any good?’ I’d been focusing on it too hard like looking through a pinhole, you know what I mean? And because so much of it was done by myself in the studio, yeah, I needed some perspective.”

To help him sort it all out, Plaskett took the album to his good buddy Gordie Johnson (Grady, Big Sugar) in Texas to mix the album and give him some fresh perspective.

Johnson, a friend to many east coast bands, was happy to help out, Plaskett says, explaining that Johnson has a way of helping an artist find exactly what it is they’re looking for.

In the day and age of hit singles and artists of the month where albums are becoming more and more like dinosaurs, Plaskett admits he was a little concerned how people would react to a three-disc album.

“I was concerned certainly about how people would react to a triple album because it could be dismissed or just considered pretentious or something. But I also thought it’s hard to get noticed these days, you’ve got to do something dramatic, you know? So that’s what I aimed to do, just to make something that felt really good to me and took me places I’d never been as a writer.

“And I love thinking conceptually, and something this elaborate was frankly kind of fun and exciting and I thought well, if it’s exciting for me then hopefully my audience is going to go, ‘Oh cool’ as opposed to ‘Eh whatever, it’s a really long record. Who cares?’”

Plaskett says he gets a kick out of flying in the face of what’s considered normal these days, but ultimately he just cares about records and he enjoys telling a story over the course of a long recording.

On the road with the singer-songwriter this time out is Cousins, Egge and Bill Plaskett.

“It’s got lots of variety even though it’s an acoustic show, and that’s what I’m really enjoying,” Plaskett explains. “It’s a nice balance between still  making it feel a little spontaneous and rock n’ roll even though we’re standing there with acoustic guitars. ”

The Emergency, Dave Marsh and Chris Pennell, will join Plaskett and company for a few select dates on the tour, notably two gigs in Halifax that are coming up at the end of May.

Three is in stores on CD now, and it’s available online here. The album will be released on vinyl via Plaskett’s own New Scotland Records shortly, with pre-orders being shipped this Friday. For more, check this out.

Joel Plaskett, along with Rose Cousins, Ana Egge, Bill Plaskett and The Joel Plaskett Emergency, will perform in Halifax at the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium on Thursday, May 28 and Saturday, May 30. The second show is already sold out, so if you’re interested, you’d best pick up your tickets soon. Plaskett’s only other east coast date coming up soon is Tuesday, June 30 at Market Square in Saint John, N.B.

Colepaugh tours with Roch Voisine

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

Moncton’s own Chris Colepaugh of Chris Colepaugh & The Cosmic Crew will soon be heading overseas to tour with celebrated French Canadian artist Roch Voisine.

Colepaugh has done a ton of session work in addition to his own music over the years, but this is certainly the most high profile gig he’s had.

Rather than rehash the story, here is an interview I did with Colepaugh recently discussing the upcoming tour and his other plans.

Neon Highway to perform with Blue Rodeo

Another high profile slot for a Moncton band is coming the way of country group Neon Highway. The band perform alongside Blue Rodeo, Matt Minglewood and other acts at the Miramichi Culture Fest 2009 on Friday, June 26 in Miramichi, N.B.

For more on the show, click here.

Dog Day releases Concentration

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Dog Day

Acclaimed indie-rock act Dog Day releases their sophomore album, Concentration (Outside Music) on Tuesday, April 28. The highly anticipated follow up to the band’s celebrated debut, Night Group, was mixed by John Agnello (Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr).

Retreating to their basement studio in Halifax, N.S., Dog Day recorded the majority of Concentration in the fall of 2008. The band was meticulous with each track, carefully piecing together synth tones and guitar squalls to create the sound they had in mind.

“We had a clear vision of what we wanted the record to be like, as well as a bunch of production ideas we wanted to try … the kind of ideas you really don’t have time for when you’re paying for studio time,” frontman Seth Smith said in a press release. “The last record was a never ending labyrinth of studio work, it took us forever to get in there and actually finish it.”

Once the album’s tracking was complete, the band took the songs to John Agnello. Working at Water Music Recorders in Hoboken, N.J., the project took its final steps toward completion.

“John had a window of two weeks and liked the material,” says Smith. “Everything he did was great. He’s got great taste and is a total pro … that’s because he is a Virgo, we knew that going in.”

Dog Day began in 2005 as a recording project for Seth Smith’s frail folk songs following the demise of his former band, The Burdocks. Soon after, he was joined by Nancy Urich (also of The Burdocks) and KC Spidle & Crystal Thili of hardcore act, The Hold. The new line-up led Smith’s songs down a more punk-influenced path of power-chords and one-note leads. Dog Day’s debut EP, Thank You, debuted at #8 in Canada on the !earshot campus radio charts quickly earned them national attention.

The band returned in 2007 with its acclaimed debut LP, Night Group (Tomlab/Black Mountain).

Following the release of Night Group, Dog Day toured relentlessly throughout Canada, Europe and the US, including a two-week stint with Eric’s Trip in the summer of 2008. The group revisited the relationship this March, when they recorded a four song EP with Rick White, including a song that White had written specifically for the band. The record will be released in the summer of 2009 on 7″ vinyl by Divorce Records and digitally by Outside Music.

More new east coast records

A few other east coast records that I neglected to point out were released recently:

● Sackville, N.B.’s Shotgun Jimmie released Still Jimmie (You’ve Changed Records) last month. The album was borne from a partnership with Ontario rockers Attack in Black. The band, so won over by Jimmie’s previous solo album The Onlys, invited Jimmie on a recent national tour. Leading up to the dates, the two acts regularly performed together with Attack in Black acting as Jimmie’s backing band. His tunes took on new dimensions with the four-piece behind him. Following the completion of the tour, the acts decided to document the chemistry they had developed, and set out to record in Attack in Black’s home studio.

● Also last month, Fredericton five-piece The Slate Pacific released its debut six-song EP Safe Passage (Forward Music Group). The group is centred around the songs of principal songwriter, Logan Hawkes, who recruited Zach Atkinson on drums (Share), Stephen Dunn on guitar (Force Fields, All of Green), Heather Ogilvie on bass (The Names and Faces) and Brad Perry on keys (The Names and Faces).

East Coasters win Junos

At the Junos last month, both Old Man Luedecke and Sarah McLachlan took home awards. Luedecke, a first-time nominee took home Roots & Tradition Album of the Year for his album Proof Of Love.

McLachlan, celebrating the 20-year anniversary of her triumphant music career and who has eight Juno Awards to her name, added one more as she received the 2009 Allan Waters Humanitarian Award. The Award, named after CHUM Ltd. founder Allan Waters and made possible by funding from the CTV/CHUM benefits package, recognizes her outstanding contributions to charities and organizations at home and internationally.

Joel Plaskett talks to East Coast Noise

In the midst of a hectic cab ride in Fredericton, Joel Plaskett spoke to East Coast Noise about touring with his father, his new three-disc record Three and more. Check back later this week for the scoop!

Classified does it his way

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Classified

Halifax emcee Classified (née Luke Boyd) has been working, do-it-yourself fashion, for over a decade making a name for himself.

He built his name from the ground up, releasing several independent releases including his first LP Union Dues in 2001, the Juno-nominated Boy-Cott-In The Industry in 2006 and Hitch Hikin’ Music in 2007.

Amazing for a young hip hop artist based out of his home in Halifax, Classified has sold well over 40,000 records in Canada. Recently, he won the 2009 East Coast Music Award Fan’s Choice Award.

This week, Classified’s latest disc, Self-Explanatory, hits store shelves and already his single “Anybody Listening” (video embedded below) is getting regular play on MuchMusic and radio stations across the country.

Classified had a little extra help with this new release. A few months back he signed a deal with Sony Music Canada. While this might seem curious coming from a guy with a D.I.Y. attitude and history, Classified told East Coast Noise recently that it really hasn’t changed much in terms of how he does things.

“I’ve always been doing everything myself,” he says. “Manufacturing, marketing … now it’s on their heads. They’re still letting me do my thing. They said, ‘OK, go do the record,’ and I handed it in when it was done.

“I’m still making the same amount of money,” he continues. “But I get to focus on the music.”

That’s just the way he likes it. “I don’t like doing the business shit,” he explains.

With Self-Explanatory hitting stores this week, Classified has a busy schedule ahead of him. A cross-Canada tour kicks off in Vancouver April 23 and it runs pretty much non-stop until a show in Halifax on June 5. He’ll follow that up with festival dates in the summer and a tour of Australia in August.

Plus, he is still producing Halifax-based artists.

That’s not all that is keeping him busy, however. Classified is now the proud pop of a six-month-old daughter.

Things have been busy and stressful, he admits, but he adds that this is what he loves to do, so he’ll take the stress.

Asked if having a child will affect his music in any way, he says with a laugh, “I’m not doing a bunch of daddy-daughter songs yet. But it will likely change my perspective on things, on life.”

Classified will perform these east coast dates in May and June:

May 29 – Saint John, N.B. @ Ozone (19+)
May 30 – Fredericton, N.B. @ Capital Exhibition (All Ages)
June 5 – Halifax, N.S. @ The Palace (19+)

Here is the video for Classified’s current single “Anybody Listening.”