SLOW LEAVES SHARES “NOTHING REALLY CHANGES” FROM UPCOMING LP

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Having already released the first single, “American Band”, from his upcoming album, Meantime, today Slow Leaves returns another track from the LP, “Nothing Really Changes”. The breezy country-folk tune recalls John Prine’s mastery of making everyday moments feel magical. “It’s a song about the isolation that comes with bouts of depression,” says Grant Davidson, the Winnipeg based artist behind Slow Leaves. “You’re alone in your head,with yourself,with an enemy to whom you’ve not only surrendered but embraced. There’s a perverse pride in this thinking, a pleasure in indulging what feels hopeless to resist. There’s a feeling of inhabiting the real you, of embodying now your true self. It’s a testament to the power of perspective, a bias in believing your present view is the correct one by perceiving clarity through clouded logic. You confuse stubbornness for strength. You begin to see those around you, your loved ones, bearing the weight you’d thought was yours alone. If I’m lucky this realization comes by way of a song, an acknowledgment easier said than done, that sometimes I need help too.”

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MORE ABOUT MEANTIME
Slow Leaves’ latest album, Meantime, is about waiting for something momentous to occur in life, and how all the mundane stuff that happens during the wait actually constitutes what is meaningful. If you blink, you miss it; if you think too much, you miss it. If you’re lucky, in the meantime, there’s love and there’s death and not much less. “I see this album as a love letter, a collection of messes that fit neatly within a regular life if there is such a thing. In that sense, I guess these songs serve as a reminder for myself, since I’m forgetful, that all moments are equal in that they pass through us once only in long stretches of boredom or by bursts of love and death. In the meantime, I only hope not to let any more go by unnoticed.”

The lead single, “American Band”, is a quaint and sweet toe-tapping track with a Tom Petty flair for roots-rock impressionism. Its taut, indie-rock groove lends the song a contemporary feel, but its chorus’s lush layers of airy vocals recalls prime 1960s folk-rock. The song speaks to the glittered mythology about being in a band on the road, and here Davidson’s words are scene-setting and heartfelt. He sings: ‘I wanna see the ocean / Tell my baby I’m coming back home instead/I don’t feel good/I want my own sweet, own sweet, bed / I don’t feel so good no more / Roll the window down and turn it around’. “At some point on every tour, I feel the weight of an existential pressure to justify why I’m not somewhere else doing something more reasonable,” Davidson says. “I know reality is always grittier than the dream, but like most things worth doing, the allure is in moments that break you just enough to feel saved.”

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An elegant earthiness courses through Meantime which features a collection of folk songs adorned with paisley 1960s and 70s touches. While there is a retro sensibility to music, it is offset by an immediacy to the lyrics, setting him firmly in modern times. 

The reverie of new love and open-window summer nights comes alive on “Grand Marquis”. Here, against a waltz-like groove with chiming guitars and symphonic swells strings, Davidson’s vocals have a breezy flow as he poetically details a fictional account of physical entanglement. One stunning passage reads: ‘The hair on your forearm afield / Light through the crown of a dandelion seed’. Amidst twinkling guitars, ultra-hooky folk-rock, and lushly layered vocals, Davidson waxes rhapsodic about nostalgic love on the fictionalized but emotionally resonant “Jenny”. “With this song, I feel like I’m tapping into a sentimental look into the freedom and naiveté of young love,” he reveals. The album closes majestically with the lonesome fingerpicked ballad, “Say Goodnight”, an intimate rumination on love and death. “Say Goodnight” features some of Davidson’s most literate and heartfelt words. He sings: ‘I had a nice time, I had a nice time / That’s what you said when you let me go / Then I drifted off far below / And I closed my eyes.’

Slow Leaves is a self-contained solo project with Davidson curating every aspect of the music and its presentation, including being the multi-instrumentalist, producer, cover art designer, photographer, and videographer. He views the totality of these various aspects as being essential parts of a larger project of self-understanding through artistic methods. His folk and psych-rock stylings recall older songwriters like Nick Drake, Mickey Newbury, and Neil Young. But they also live in the world of modern classic writers like Andy Shauf, Bedouine, Big Thief, and Bill Callahan. His silky voice has been compared to Roy Orbison or Bryan Ferry. 

Davidson began playing guitar at age 15, inspired after discovering a Led Zeppelin II cassette tape in his older brother’s room. It was a finger-picked guitar however that would eventually form the heart of his songs. After three shoe-string budget albums under his own name, Davidson debuted as Slow Leaves in 2014 with Beauty Is So Common, followed by Enough About Me (2017), Shelf Life (2020), and Holiday (2021). 

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MEANTIME TRACKLIST
01 American Band
02 Reason Why
03 Happy All The Time
04 Nothing Really Changes
05 Grand Marquis
06 Jenny
07 Goodbye Florida
08 Anyone Out There
09 Underneath This
10 Say Goodnight 

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