My apologies for the delay in
getting this next review done – it was a new album so I wanted to be sure I
gave it a lot of consecutive listens before I said anything about it. I also
went to see the band live on Monday, so after I review the studio album, I’ll
review their show as well. A Creative Maelstrom: Your One-Stop Music Review
Shop!
Disc 669 is…. Let’s Be Ready
Artist: The
Wooden Sky
Year of Release: 2014
What’s up with the Cover? Based on the street
sign (Dundas Street W), this looks like somewhere in Toronto. It is interesting
what people think needs to be on their business sign to draw customers. These
guys appear to be advertising “Tina”, “Coffee” and “Breakfast” are for sale,
based on their big yellow sign. A smaller red sign below indicates you can get
“Hot Food Sandwich Etc.” Good to know the sandwich is not only hot, but will
also consist of food. As for the “etc.” I assume that’s Tina again.
Joking
aside, this is just the sort of unassuming hole-in-the-wall that often makes
great diner food. If I’m ever wandering down Dundas Street W I’ll keep an eye
out for it.
How I Came To Know It: When looking for new music ideas, I often pick the
brain of servers or store clerks or pretty much anyone I run into that looks
like they have something going on behind the eyes.
A few
years ago, I was getting breakfast at my own local diner, Floyd’s. Our server suggested
The Cave Singers and The Wooden Sky. She even wrote them both down, but I put the
note in my wallet and promptly forgot it was in there. I didn’t find it until a
little over a year ago when I was changing wallets and found the scrap of
paper.
I
checked both bands out. The Cave Singers didn’t grab me, but I had an instant
connection with the Wooden Sky. I went out and bought one of their albums, and
not long after I bought another two. When “Let’s Be Ready” came out I was already
a wholesale convert, and bought it immediately..
How It Stacks Up: I have four Wooden Sky albums, which I believe is
all of their main studio albums. I like them all. “Let’s Be Ready” is probably
tied for third.
Rating: 4 stars
The Wooden Sky’s fourth album has
the band showing a slightly more rock edge to their sound, without losing sight
of the starkly honest lyrics and clever melodies that made them so good to
begin with. Four albums in, this band hasn’t made a bad step yet.
The Wooden Sky is a Canadian band
through and through and their home-country influences shine through strong.
They are like a latter day Blue Rodeo, and it is hard to hear them and not
imagine them growing up listening to Jim Cuddy, Greg Keelor and the boys. Five
years and four albums in, it isn’t overstating it to say the Wooden Sky has
shown they are worthy inheritors – equals even – of the seminal bands like Blue
Rodeo that came before them.
The uniquely compelling vocals of
lead singer Gavin Gardiner are a big part of the band’s sound. Gardiner has a subtly
surprising range, and an ability to put the hurt into every note. He sings like
he means it, and he has a fresh phrasing to his vocals that shouldn’t work but
does. On “Let’s Be Ready” there are places where he strays slightly into overly
affected territory, but he always pulls it back before it becomes a problem.
When the album is jumping it has a
good energy, and the opening track “Saturday
Night” gets things rolling with a bang. It is a party song wrapped around what
it’s like to feel estranged from the party experience. This musical device of
taking a frenetic upbeat song and undercutting it with disconnected lyrics is
standard business in modern indie pop, but I’ll give the Wooden Sky kudos for
doing it well.
The album has a good atmospheric
quality on up-tempo tracks like “Maybe It’s
No Secret” and “When the Day is Fresh
and the Light is New” (which needs a shorter title) and these are good
songs, but not my favourites.
Call me maudlin, but I’m happiest
when the Wooden Sky drag me down a bit and let me wallow. “Kansas City” and the title track “Let’s Be Ready” are two of the best mournful parting songs I’ve
heard. “Kansas City” is from the
perspective of the person leaving, knowing at some level he’s a fool for doing
so. When the music swells and Gardiner sings:
“The road rose up to meet us, a tangled mess of yellow
lines.
Though I should’ve seen it coming I just couldn’t stop in
time.
I had to move, sometimes I wonder what I’m gonna do.”
You feel the wanderlust of someone
losing one dream in search of another.
“Let’s Be Ready” is the opposite side of the same experience;
knowing your lover has to go, and having to let them go, wondering why you are
ending up second to their dreams. Turnaround is fair play, and the Wooden Sky
is hip to that vibe. This song, which is just voice and acoustic guitar really
lets the melody shine. When Gardiner climbs up to the top of his register and
sings “Lover take these arms and build us
a boat” his voice captures the helpless surrender of the heart when another
person’s happiness comes before yours. It may feel right, but it doesn’t feel
good.
“Write Them Down” feels even less good, but it is my favourite song
on the album, and I think Gardiner’s best vocal effort as well. It hits you
like a confession, an empty plea for things to work out, when you know it won’t.
On my first listen, it had me inexplicably thinking about my cat Inigo, who I
lost not long ago. I’m pretty certain it isn’t about losing a pet, but with
lines like “Leave a doorway to the
past/and try to make a good thing last” it hit me in a tender spot that has
a long way to go from healing over.
The final track on the album, “Don’t You Worry About a Thing” is
destined to be a sing-a-long classic for years to come. Another song with an
ironic title (o how these hipsters love their irony) it is a delicious irony.
Life sucks, but there’s an acceptance.
One thing that doesn’t suck is
this record. I gave it five listens in a row, and it got better on every listen.
I can’t wait for their next one.
Best tracks: Saturday
Night, Baby Hold On, Kansas City, Write This Down, Let’s Be Ready, Don’t Worry
About a Thing
The Concert – September 30, 2014 at Distrikt (sic)
Nightclub, Victoria
I was nervous about this show. I
had recently seen a similar band (Deep Dark Woods) at a similar club-style
venue (Upstairs Lounge) and the sound had been dense as mud.
It turns out I had no reason for
concern – The Wooden Sky were crystal clear and perfect throughout. They were a
bit crowded on the small stage, and the view wasn’t great but it didn’t affect
their playing at all, which was excellent.
My last concert was Steve Earle’s “Low
Highway” tour and my friend Casey made a good observation that lead singer
Gardiner has a bit of young Steve in him. He jumps to the mike with an energy
driven by the song, and then retreats back under his hair, like he’s
simultaneously driven to perform, and shy to show too much of himself.
Song selection was just right,
with about half the concert being songs from the new album and the other half
some of my favourites from their earlier albums. I have no idea what their ‘hits’
would be from long-attending fans so it was nice to find that a lot of the
songs that I think are their standouts were the songs they played.
The band keeps the chit-chat down
and lets the music speak for itself, but when they do interact there’s a
genuine warmth and appreciation that all these folks have come out to see them
play.
The venue was “Distrikt,” a bar that
on the weekend has long been a bit of pick-up joint for the short-skirt/muscle
shirt crowd. I won’t judge, since I went there a few times in my early
twenties. Back then it was called “the Forge” and since then it has had a half-dozen
other incarnations. It hasn’t changed much over the years, but the seat
cushions seemed new and it was generally clean. They could have done with some
servers, but the bartenders were affable when I finally got off my ass and
sought them out.
The audience was very young
(compared to me) and for the most part seemed to be there to genuinely see the
band, which was nice. There was a bit of murmuring chatter during the encore I
didn’t appreciate, but it was pretty muted compared to some bar concerts I’ve
been to.
Whatever the case, the Wooden Sky
had drawn me in from the first song and never lost me. The worst part was when
they stopped playing. If they come again, I’d get a ticket in a heartbeat, and
you should to.
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