I apologize the stretch between posts. This was a combination of a
heavy work schedule and being out on Tuesday night at a concert when I’d
ordinarily be at home writing.
On the plus side this means that we get a bonus concert review – it
appears immediately below the end of this studio album review, as is traditional
here at the Odyssey.
We also have a new streak to track: albums made by people named
William. As of this next record it stands at two.
Disc 1906 is… Further From the Country
Artist: William Prince
Year of Release: 2025
What’s up with the Cover? The aforementioned
Mr. Prince, looking contemplative against a backdrop of sunset and stars.
How I Came To Know It: I was already a fan of William Prince through his 2020 album “Reliever”
(reviewed back at Disc 1476), and check in on his new albums when they
arrive.
How It Stacks Up: I have two William Prince albums. Of
those two, “Further From the Country” narrowly lands in second. No shame – I just
liked “Reliever” slightly better.
Ratings: 3 stars
Life’s not fair. Some of us get our one and a half octaves of
scratchy/dodgy tenor and some of us get the rich velvet baritone of William
Prince. Fortunately, through the power of technology, that glorious voice can
travel with us in our homes, cars and walks. I had this record going for a full
week and enjoyed it in all three of those venues.
“Further from the Country” is aptly named, as Prince explores
arrangements and approaches that feel more atmospheric and mystical than
previous efforts. No doubt this is partly the influence of members of Boy
Golden.
That said, the opening – and title – track had me nervous. It was
a bit too meandering and atmospheric for my tastes, and I felt nervous that my
beloved baritone troubadour would be drowned in a soup of production.
Alas, my fears were ill-founded as after that opening experimentation,
Prince returns to a more well-trodden country foundation. Yes, it’s a thicker
sound, and there’s a piano rounding things out, but the tunes still have their foundational
bones in back roads and pickup trucks, just as I like it.
The songs have the usual introspective qualities of William Prince’s
earlier work, many focusing on exploring memories of his father, or just
earlier wilder times. The songs don’t celebrate that wildness but rather seek
redemption for any hurt caused along the way.
The best song for this (and my favourite on the album) is “All
the Same” which starts with this heartbreaking scene:
“I had a good friend
Life cut short by his own hand
Everybody but his old man
Seemed so surprised
“He was a younger man than I
Didn’t think to say goodbye
Now the last time that we spoke’s the last time.”
Hard words, but Prince has a talent for taking
on hard subjects – suicide, substance abuse, violence – and giving them grace
and a safe place to explore from. It isn’t sugar coated, and lines like “and
my hand’s messed up/from a fight I had to finish” shows that it ain’t ever
as simple as just saying, “don’t do that”. Life’s complicated, but
forgiveness is there if look for it.
The other standout is “The Charmer”
a song dedicated to Prince’s father, a gregarious fellow who right to the end
was even charming the hospital nurses. The love is evident, and the gentle,
meaningful ways that Prince explores loss – supercharged with the velvet power of
a voice – is transformative.
There are some songs I didn’t love. As
noted above, the opener was too diffuse and unfocused for me, and “Thousand
Miles of Chain” felt like a song that didn’t know what it wanted to be, but
these are minor quibbles. Overall, another fine record from an artist who still
has the magic in both his voice and pen.
Best tracks: For the First Time, All the Same, Damn, The Charmer
The Concert: March 2, 2026 at the Royal Theatre, Victoria BC
I always enjoy a show at the beautiful Royal Theatre, and we were
particularly excited (thanks to Sheila’s excellent selection) to have seats
right on a break between rows, leaving plenty of legroom. Mostly, though I was
excited to see not one, but two artists I like, having just found out earlier
in the week that the opener was Boy Golden (his previous release, “For Jimmy”
was my #1 album of 2023 (Disc 1699)).
Boy Golden
Boy Golden took to the stage with the self-possessed dignity of a
band that knew they would own it, and did not disappoint. My previous time
seeing them there was a jubilant slightly manic feel to the performance. That energy
was still present, but it had softened around the edges and their ability to
hold the crowd in more subtle ways was on display.
The band played a short but well-structured set that included old
favourites from previous records, but focused on their new material which was,
according to frontman and creative force Liam Duncan, “mostly bangers”. Sure.
The guitarist (name escapes me) played with a sublime softness in his
tone that suited the blend of country wisdom and grass-stained feel of many of
the songs (n.b. – not the kind of grass you lie down on). He had three guitars
and one had an incredibly large whammy bar. I know it’s not about the size of
your whammy bar, but how artfully you pull on it, but still, just sayin’. It
was large.
The drummer (apologies – again missed her name) was well loved by
the audience and had a set of pipes on her she showed off in two songs (one as
a lead, one as a duet). She played portions with brushes that leaned into the
soft and rounded feel of the guitar.
I was sad to see Boy Golden off so early (the fate of all openers)
and much as I love William Prince, if I’d had my druthers I’d have swapped
headliner and opener.
William Prince
When William Prince came on stage there was a prolonged period
where the stage was black and ambient music played and it all felt very psychedelic
rock and roll for what was, ultimately, a country show. I kinda liked it, and
it primed the crowd and made sure everyone was paying attention.
Including himself, Prince fronts a seven-member band which is a
lot of members for someone who isn’t, you know, Prince. One more band
member and Canadian law would have required all the songs to be played as ska.
The set list was exactly the right mix of new and old, and if
anything I enjoyed the records off the new album better live than on CD, which
is always a good sign. (If Neil Young had been there, he’d have moved a motion
that “live music is better” bumper stickers be issued. IYKYK…
New album highlight was the song “The Charmer” in honour of
his father, and he gave the audience (including me) what they wanted with the
old favourite, “The Spark”. I would have liked him to work “The Gun”
into the set, which is one of my old faves, but a concert should always leave
you wanting more.
During the encore the audience (many of whom were clearly veterans
of Prince’s live shows) shouted out tunes, and to my surprise he agreed to play
one – “Goldie Hawn”. I’m pretty sure it was improvised, partly because
he briefly jumped a verse, before correcting himself with an impish smile that shows
he has inherited no small part of the “charmer” from his father.
Prince has a truly thankful and humble quality to him that draws
you in and makes you feel he’s as happy to be there as you are.
As for the crowd, they were one of the best crowds I’ve spent an
evening with in some time. They were thoroughly engrossed in the show, gave
great feedback and were careful to not be disruptive of other people’s good
times while having theirs (one woman stood up in front of people during “The
Spark” but it was one song only and she was really excited to hear it,
so we shall give her a pass).
Best of all, there were nary a cell phone raised anywhere in my vision.
Apart from a few discrete pictures people were there to engage with the music
directly, not prove later on Tik Tok they’d been there. Awesome, and something
for us all to learn from.
Sheila and I talked to the folks sitting near us, all of whom loved
William Prince a lot - one couple had seen him seven times. All crowds
should be this great.
The merch table was also solid, with a good selection of shirts n’
stuff. One guy sitting nearby said to me “that stuff is all garbage” but
he was speaking generally of merch tables, not this merch table. Also, he was
wrong. It’s another way to support the band, mister and also keeps me from
being denied service at local restaurants for want of a shirt.
Overall, this was a fine show, with two great acts, both of whom I’d
seen before, and both of whom I would see again.