Thursday 15 November 2012

DEEP DARK WOODS - Interview with Chris Mason

 Canadian roots act combines 

the familiar with the fantastical


Deeper, darker, more woodsy


Deep Dark Woods share their deeply ingrained soul 
Whether it’s a mere ramble down the sylvan path or a sentimental journey back to the turn of the century, any dalliance involving the The Deep Dark Woods is bound to find you stumbling over some gnarly roots. Emerging from the golden hues of a Saskatchewan sunset to weave their latest album, guitarist-vocalist Burke Barlow, bassist Chris Mason, organist-pianist Geoff Hilhorst, drummer Lucas Goetz and guitarist-vocalist Ryan Boldt retool old-fashioned techniques to express timeless themes. The newest material from The Deep Dark Woods is not only a declaration of the lads’ artistic independence, but constituted a musical experiment of global proportions.

“We recorded The Place I Left Behind out in Halifax,” Boldt says. “It was our first self-produced album and shopping around for label representation took way longer than we imagined it would. So, while we were waiting for the right label to come along, we went out and toured a lot in the U.S and hit some really well-attended Canadian dates. We’ve been over to Europe twice now and both trips were equally great. It’s incredibly fortunate that we eventually wound up signing with both Sugar Hill and Six Shooter Records, but it also means so much to us as a band to have had that experience, of playing festivals everywhere from Halifax to Vancouver, under our belts.”


Over-running the borders that inevitably spring up between folk, roots and rock music factions, Boldt and his fellow strummers have gained a humble appreciation for the attention they’ve received from foreign fans.

 “The average North American crowd is a heck of a lot more rowdy than the ones you see in the U.K. and Holland. It’s way different. The audiences over there are more into close listening, as opposed to just being there to socialize and only checking out the band as a secondary consideration. It’s interesting to see everyone sitting down, focusing and actually ‘Ssssh’-ing the other people.”

Quietly crafted with the help of recording engineer Darren Van Niekerk, who worked with the band on the winning single “Charlie’s (is Coming Down)” for CBC’s Songquest, The Place I Left Behind speaks volumes when it comes to The Deep Dark Woods’ growth, if you’ll forgive the pun. Using vintage amps that could restart the coldest heart, the Saskatoon quintet brings a rustic raucousness to their simple yet stirringly beautiful songs. A catalogue of floorboard-shaking ditties, including “West Side Street,” “Sugar Mama” and, of course, “The Place I Left Behind,” grants the band plenty of room to shake off their denim blues and show off their moves.


 “We’ve had a bit of a break and now we’re ready to let loose and bring it down a bit. You can expect a dynamic set that will have everybody moving,” Boldt says. “The longer we play together, the more we try to put into our performances. The things people are noticing in the recordings are the things that evolved in our live show; those are the key elements that led us to want to self-produce. It’s a really important step for us. Playing live and working the music out the way we do onstage keeps our songwriting process fresh. When we’re performing we never play a song the same way twice.”

Westward-bound and set to perform by special request at the Bragg Creek Centre, The Deep Dark Woods’ salt-of-the-earth sound strikes a psychological chord with a wide spectrum of followers. Tin-type memories and Mellotron-stained dreams emerge when the gritty group lays out its soulful songbook. Flickering with emotional intelligence, their creative spark continues to shine through the darkness like a match thrown down a mineshaft.

“It’s about seeking a different perspective and finding a new way to present old songs so you don’t end up repeating yourself. I’m impartial when it comes to choosing between playing heartbreaking ballads or jamming out rock tunes. All five of us bring our own musical sensibilities to our sound and I’m all about textures and layers and playing a supporting role by staying under the vocal melodies. I think our combined sound is reminiscent of certain features people are used to hearing, and have always enjoyed, out of folk bands. For example, people have drawn similarities between us and other iconic Canadian folk acts; The Band in particular. We may possess some common attributes, but I don’t think we’d call them a direct influence. For me, a song doesn’t necessarily have to be recognizable to sound familiar.”

~Christine Leonard
Originally published in Fast Forward Weekly November 2012


Video: THE DEEP DARK WOODS - 18th of DECEMBER

 

Thursday 1 November 2012

NO RIVER - An interview with Chris Nevile and Stewart Elton



NO RIVER


 

ROCK AND ROLL DEATH MADE COUNTRY by Christine Leonard

 

The best damn saloon-band this side of Wayne, Alberta: No River prefers rawhide to rhinestones. Half-cut and full-loaded, the Calgary-based five-piece makes light work of an honest day’s labour. Picking up somewhere between alt-country somnolence and folk punk bravado, they run down riffs like a barn cat going after a piece of tail.

“This affair started with Trenton and some friends who wanted to start a country band as a way to party during Stampede,” explains singer/songwriter/bassist Stewart Elton. “I’ve been playing together with Trenton for over 10 years and was quickly summoned to play bass. After a good two years or so of performing random covers, we had pretty much mastered the art of making just about anyone sound country. The progression went from doing straight-up versions of early classics, like Merle Haggard, to eventually trying to use that countrified style for other songs. We were having so much fun playing that after Stampede ended just we kept on going and eventually started writing original material.”

Rustling in mainstream fodder from hit-makers ranging from The Replacements to Garth Brooks, the jumped-up cover-project has set a prairie-fire on the lips of the Wild Turkey imbibing masses who swoon for the ensemble’s heady Western revivals. Testing the waters with their 2008 nine-track debut, Don’t Pray, the band won accolades for their deep rootsy tones, stirring refrains and superior instrumentation. Here, drunken laments and bar-stool ballads are elevated to legendary status. Heartfelt lyrical stories, clad in by bold yet worn-through melodies, which leave you moist with anticipation and limp with defeat.

“I think we gravitate towards songs that are deceptively easy, but sound outrageous when we present them live,” Elton surmises. “Sometimes we ask ourselves what we’re getting into, but then we just go for it. Now that there are five people in the band, I think we’re definitely playing rock music in a country style. We’re taking advantage of having banjos, lap steel and honky-tonk piano to get us where we want to go. And, we’re having a great time doing it.”

Though the sky may have been cloudless over their dusty trail, No River opened the floodgates by welcoming vocalist/keyboardist/morning DJ Chris Nevile to the fold in late 2011. Joining bassist Elton, percussionist Trenton Shaw, guitarist/lap steel/banjo player Lawrence Nasen and guitarist/vocalist Cody Swinkels, cougar-bait Nevile brings his own golden timbre (and swelling country organ) to the group’s double-proofed orchestral arrangements. Spurred on by the blessings of an innate yet rugged grace, a Marlborough Man’s laconic humour, and some seriously unironic moustaches, the gang with “Five Open Warrants” promises to return to the studio and begin recording a new album this fall. Until then, it’s a summer of rolling (in) the hay, splendour in the sagebrush and airbrushing Cimarron sunsets onto boogie vans across the nation.

“It’s gonna be a solid gold Canadian beaver summer,” Nevile affirms. “Canada Day and Stampede are going to be awesome and then we have a ten day tour out to Vancouver and back through Saskatchewan and Manitoba in middle of July. This time around, the plan is definitely to try to have some more rock jams to compliment our more introverted, sentimental, soul-digging stuff. We’re always trying out new material and we’re especially looking forward to unleashing this demon – this new crazy style that we’ve developed.”

Originally published on · .

 
By Christine Leonard