Posts Tagged ‘Clem Snide’


22.04.2008

The Details: Draw A Distance. Draw A Border.

posted by Will

in Best New Music, Music Reviews

details.jpg

The Details hail from Winnipeg. That poor city, I swear, every time I hear it mentioned I think back to the great Weakerthans song, “One Great City” where John K. Samson utters the phrase I hate Winnipeg over and over again. I simply can not help it. Where am I going with this? Well, it’s all an appropriate thought when listening to The Details debut, Draw A Distance. Draw A Border. In style and tone, the Details are mining that same sonic territory as The Weakerthans. Hell, Stephen Carroll from The Weakerthans even makes an appearance on the album with his pedal steel.

Much like The Weakerthans, The Details can go from thoroughly rocking songs to touching slower pieces at the drop of a hat. The band has a remarkable balance that they strike on Draw A Distance. Draw A Border. Lyrically, The Details are more about traditional storytelling rather than poetic lyrical nuggets though. Instrumentally, the band is wonderfully rich in tone. Pedal steel, banjo, cello, viola, trumpet, piano and organ all make their mark across the extensive landscape of Draw A Distance. Draw A Border.

I’m not gonna lie. There are several songs on Draw A Distance. Draw A Border. that could easily find their way onto your local modern rock station. But, somehow, that never seems to be a turn-off. The band sounds completely sincere in their approach. They are not trying to score a cheap radio hit or make some far reaching artistic statement. They are just telling stories through song. It might be a simple concept but on Draw A Distance. Draw A Border. The Details make it sound triumphant.

Genre: Indie/Pop/Rock

RIYL: The Weakerthans, The Long Winters, Clem Snide

Label: Parliament of Trees

Underground

Underground.mp3

www.myspace.com/thedetails

08.12.2007

The Weakerthans: Reunion Tour

posted by Will

in Best New Music, Music Reviews

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Rather than write an entire review gushing about my love for The Weakerthans or John K. Samson, I will just let his lyrics speak for themselves. As Craig Finn (an amazing lyricist in his own right) formerly of Lifter Puller and now of The Hold Steady recently stated in the Seattle rag, The Stranger, “John Samson from the Weakerthans—he is the lyricist that I can say, without hesitation, is better than I am.” And Mr. Finn would be correct.

  • “Civil Twlight”

For the most part I think about golfing and constantly calculate all the seconds left in the minutes, and so on, etcetera. Or recite the names of provinces and Hollywood actors. Oh Ontario. Oh, Jennifer Jason Leigh.

  • “Virtute the Cat Explains Her Departure” (Samson’s lyrics here are from a cat’s perspective towards his owner. This song follows up “Plea from a Cat Named Virtue” which appeared on 2003′s Reconstruction Site)

How I’d scratch the empties, desperate to hear you make the sound that you found for me. How after scrapping with the ferals and the tabby, I’d let you brush my matted fur. How I’d knead into your chest while you were sleeping. Shallow breathing made me purr. But now I can’t remember the sound that you found for me.

  • “Tournament Of Hearts”

And my popcorn squeaks a question—wonders why I’m not at home, where you wait beside a silent telephone and doodle circles within circles, all alone. Have to stop myself from climbing on the table full of empties to yell, “Why? Why can’t I draw right up to what I want to say? Why can’t I ever stop where I want to stay? I slide right through the days. I’m always throwing hack weight.

  • “Sun In An Empty Room”

The shins that we kick beneath the table, that reflexive cry. The faces we meet one awkward beat too long and terrify, know that the things we need to say have been said already anyway, by parallelograms of light on walls that we repainted white.

So take eight minutes and divide by ninety million lonely miles, and watch a shadow cross the floor. We don’t live here anymore.

  • “Night Windows”

In the stick-count for the song of knowing you’re gone, glancing up at where you lived when you lived here, I see you, suddenly alive and nearly smiling. Stop and hold my breath and watch the way you used to be.

  • “Utilities”

Got a face full of ominous weather. Smirking smile of a high pressure ridge. Got more faults than the state of California, and the heart is a badly built bridge. Seems the most I have to offer doesn’t offer much. Make it something somebody can use. Make this something somebody can use.

Reunion Tour continues the masterful work of The Weakerthans. John K. Samson continues to pen charming, poetic lyrics and the band once again provides a more than worthy backdrop. Detractors might say it is just more of the same from The Weakerthans. Whatever the case may be, at album #4, I still find myself madly in love with this band.

Genre: Indie/Pop/Rock

RIYL: Clem Snide, The Mountain Goats, Death Cab For Cutie

Night Windows

999

Sun In An Empty Room

1013

www.myspace.com/theweakerthans