jack white - blunderbuss (4/5)

Jack White may well be rock and roll’s greatest trickster—a shape shifter of the highest order.

The White Stripes were always a deceptively simple band; accessible and ever straightforward. But diving into their music, audiences were treated with a depth and precision often lacking in their garage-rock revivalist brethren. Blunderbuss is no different. On first listen it has something for everyone and is even easy to dismiss as slightly unfocused. But that’s where Jack White the trickster comes in and you know, deep inside your musical heart that it can’t be that simple; that it can’t just be written off.

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interview with...bahamas

I’m writing about Canadiana and that quest for “National Identity” … Or at least that’s what I tell Bahamas’ Afie Jurvenen in the awkward first moments of our conversation. And we talked about that but about so much more too. Mostly, we talked about love. And Toronto. And music … and Toronto.

We talked about the elusive quest for what it means to be Canadian. And I had to gush a little. I love Barchords. It’s easily one of my favourite albums of the first half of the year. So we talked about that a bit…

Michelle: It feels like a little secret…

Afie: I hope it doesn’t stay a secret for too long. I suppose there’s some truth to that yeah. When you put something like that into the world it’s an acknowledgement of a secret.

M: So talk me through your creative process. Are you a ritualistic writer?

A: It’s sort of ongoing. I just write songs whenever I can, really. If a little spark of something comes to me I just try and be open to it. And to make time for it. I find that the biggest challenge, making time and giving yourself room for something like that to happen. I’m always writing all the time. It’s a little more difficult when you’re travelling all the time because when you have a free moment you just want to be sleeping. But when I’m home it’s part of my routine, I wake up in the morning and drink coffee and usually pick up the guitar after that.

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great lake swimmers - new wild everywhere (3.5/5)

It’s springtime! The sun is out, people are wearing less clothes and patios all across this land are filling up. And The Great Lake Swimmers’ beautiful new album, New Wild Everywhere may just be the soundtrack for these warming days.

New Wild Everywhere opens with a surprise: a waltz for the uncertain. ‘Think That You Might Be Wrong’ feels immediately like a departure for the band. New Wild Everywhere is stylistically very different from the four previous Great Lake Swimmers releases; for one, it was recorded in an actual recording studio as opposed to a boat or in any number of other places previously used by the band. In this case, Tony Dekker’s voice is given free range to run wild and this album is bigger, warmer, and more fun. Where past Great Lake Swimmers’ albums lounged in ambience and fuzz, New Wild Everywhere is bombastic and warm, rich and surprisingly clean.

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