Wintersleep v Better Than Freds
Wintersleep at Better Than Fred's
Sun Aug 5 2018
$26.25 Advance
Doors at 7 pm
Tickets on sale March 1 at Better Than Fred's, Revolution Place box office and online at http://bit.ly/2EYiavz
WINTERSLEEP
The Great Detachment, Wintersleep's sixth LP and first with Dine Alone Records, is very much an introspective work, both conceptually and thematically. Of course, it delivers a welcome dose of the atmospheric, entrancing alt-rock for which the band has become known - the beautifully orchestrated arrangements anchored by haunting, almost hypnotic vocal melodies; however, the way those arrangements were approached and the poetry they relay are very much the product of some self-(re)discovery.
Following the tour cycle in support of Hello Hum, their critically-acclaimed 2012 release, the members of Wintersleep - vocalist/guitarist Paul Murphy, drummer Loel Campbell, guitarist Tim D'eon, bassist Mike Bigelow, and keyboardist Jon Samuel - opted to take some much-deserved downtime. But as Campbell shares, it didn't last long.
"We were all pretty excited to get back to work," he says, so in lieu of time off, they decided to write and demo new music at their own pace. After all, since their breakout success behind 2007's Welcome To The Night Sky, downtime had almost become a dirty word. "So there was something very freeing and refreshing about slowing down and rediscovering things," D'eon shares.
After writing a wealth of material in their Montreal studio, the band carefully curated the 11 songs comprising The Great Detachment and returned to Halifax's Sonic Temple - the birthplace of Welcome To The Night Sky and its preceding 2003 self-titled and 2005 untitled efforts - with producer Tony Doogan (Belle & Sebastian, Mogwai).
The band recorded the majority of The Great Detachment live-off-the-floor, adding an organic and transparent aural aesthetic to the collection. "It's a very different energy," Murphy opines, "and one that we kind of missed."
Tracks like "Amerika" and "Freak Out" are propulsive rockers, showcasing crashing guitars and clever hooks ripe with the raw emotion of earlier hits like "Oblivion" and "Black Camera." Conversely, "Metropolis" dances into darker territory, slightly more subdued to push focus towards the beautifully layered vocals while "Shadowless" reaches the furthest end of the spectrum, wrapping the listener in a warm sonic blanket of ambience and slow-building catharsis.
And matching its musical process, the lyrical thread sewn throughout The Great Detachment is one of introspection and identity; of reflection and contemplation.
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