PHARIS & JASON ROMERO TO RELEASE 5TH LP, SHARE TWO NEW TRACKS

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Photo Credit : Laureen Carruthers // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Bet On Love, the fifth record from two-time JUNO Award winners, Pharis and Jason Romero, is a modern folk ode to the reciprocal relationships between place, people and time. Recorded in their banjo shop outside the small Northern town of Horsefly, British Columbia, with the help of producer Marc Jenkins (who produced their JUNO-winning 2018 record Sweet Old Religion), the album is quite literally home grown. The songs on Bet On Love, coming May 15, 2020, are inspired by the land the Romeros live on and the lifestyle they have chosen to lead, focused on balance, simplicity and intention. Add in a bustling boutique banjo business and the raising of two young children with the busy life of active musicians, and the balancing act itself becomes an art form. 

Today, Pharis & Jason are sharing two songs from the album, “New Day” and “We All Fall”. “Last December we converted our banjo workshop into a recording studio, and spent days dusting, misting and wiping down so engineer John Raham could bring in his incredible old gear,” says Pharis. “Playing live with the musicians, we all wanted to create something that felt like a curtain of sound, with the vocals lifting over the pulse of the songs.

The songs are all related and intertwined, so we’re releasing them in pairs. ‘New Day’ and ‘We All Fall’ are the first pair. 

‘New Day’ is a wish for real connection and love, with hopes for lonely societies. When someone puts their hand in yours in love, they’re giving you a future and hope. And a triumphant refrain when you find it: ‘I can hear my voice a-singing across the valley, I can hear my voice a-singing across the hills.’

‘We All Fall” is a story of rising and falling - with a young rise to pleasure, a middle-aged fall to loneliness, and the wisdom in later years to ‘love what I have, and don’t mind what is gone’. We all fall from time to time, but the song sings with a call that we aren’t alone.”

WATCH AND SHARE “NEW DAY” HERE

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From the outside, this existence drips with romanticism. Two people in love, building banjos and rearing children by day while writing and performing intimate music by night. Yet on the inside this deceptively simple, elegant life is only made possible by applying an acute dedication to life and art, form and function, music and family. The same focus that has made Pharis & Jason Romero two of the best instrument builders in the world is brought to bear on mastering the acoustic tones of their recorded music. Their new album shines with life, reflecting a deep sense of love and community. Their unique world gently offers up tone and song, bound together in music of transcendent beauty. 

The title track from the album features the most personal song Pharis Romero has ever penned and this intimacy reverberates throughout the 11-track record. “New Day” and “Right in the Garden” sound like songs she might sing to her children–soft, warm and full of light–while “We All Fall” carries a gentle lesson. With exceptional control, range, and vocal clarity, Pharis’ voice soars above these tracks, joined in exquisite, lush harmony with Jason Romero. His calm and slightly weathered voice drifts over songs of journey and heartbreak, their vocals weaving and intertwining like branches on the willows that hang over the creek outside their door. Pharis’ songwriting draws from folk wellsprings as well as deep American and Canadian roots. A lifelong student and teacher of these roots, Pharis writes songs that seem old but echo with an ease and simplicity that belies their construction. Jason contributes the sublime instrumental composition “New Caledonia”, played (along with “Roll On My Friend”) on his handmade gourd banjo, and redolent of the Baroque complexity of early Norman Blake. In a salute to the sound of old-time country music they revere so much, many of the microphones used are as vintage as they are beautiful, with “A Bit Old School” being sung and played face-to-face through a ribbon RCA microphone from the 1940s. Also in line with this stripped-down, traditional approach, the songs, including those featuring guest musicians Patrick Metzger (bass) and John Reischman (mandolin), were all recorded live on acoustic instruments. The end result is rich vocal and instrumental soundscape of an album as deceptively simple and clear as the life that inspired it.

In the end, Pharis and Jason Romero choose the unconventional — touring selectively with two small kids, making banjos in the woods, recording at home in the winter — and they live and sing about those choices with vibrancy and an elite skill set honed through decades of dedication. Their songs are an expression of a hope found in the resilience of community, and of a love born from family, united in the melodies of life. 

PRE-ORDER BET ON LOVE HERE

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BET ON LOVE TRACKLIST
01 Hometown Blues
02 New Day
03 Roll On My Friend
04 Right In The Garden
05 Bet On Love
06 New Caledonia
07 We All Fall
08 Old Chatelaine
09 A Bit Old School
10 Kind Girl
11 World Stops Turning

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SCOTT HARDWARE SHARES TITLE TRACK FROM UPCOMING LP, ENGEL

LISTEN AND SHARE “ENGEL” YOUTUBE / SPOTIFY

ENGEL OUT APRIL 3 VIA TELEPHONE EXPLOSION

“...an eclectic and uncategorizable piano-and-strings-speckled meditation on queerness, shame, death and the afterlife.” - NOW Toronto

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Photo Credit : Shelby Fenlon // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Today, Scott Hardware shares the title track from his upcoming album, Engel, due out April 3 via Telephone Explosion courtesy of The Fader. The subject of “Engel” is in a relationship with a mischievous angel (named Engel,) who is probing his mind against his will. ‘Here he comes to comfort me, but like a fly around my head I’d sooner swat him dead,’ is sung over an off-the-grid deconstructed house piano. A symphony of creaking trains and industry envelops the banging piano and delicate strings on the chorus while our hero complains, ‘He’s here with that look again, he knows what’s happening, inside,’ not, it would seem, ready for this level of vulnerability. 

LISTEN AND SHARE “ENGEL” YOUTUBE / SPOTIFY

Engel marks the end of a three-year process of writing, recording and letting down his guard (for better or worse.) His last album, Mutate, Repeat, Infinity, was the culmination of a years-long obsession with the HIV/AIDS crisis and how it was shaped by capitalism. Hardware’s early years after coming out were shaped by the courage of people close to him who were dealing with difficult diagnoses. 

“Looking at these situations from a macro/societal lens must have been the only way I could process and share those years of my life and my loved ones’ lives with an audience” Hardware recalls. “From a writing and production standpoint, I was trying to re-imagine various eras of dance music and sound as urgent and vital as they would have in their heyday of the ‘80s and ‘90s.” 

Within a year of moving back (to Toronto) from Berlin, Scott watched Wim Wenders’ Wings of Desire and was immediately filled with its inherent curiosity. The film, in short, follows angels around pre-unification Berlin as they listen to the thoughts of the mortals they are surrounded by. 

“I sought with this album to capture the film’s velvety feeling – in turns funny, depressing, dark and mundane – in LP form” Hardware says. “These songs imagine Wenders’ angels buzzing around my friends, my family and I. Writing from their point of view allowed me unfettered access to my own thoughts about them and myself.” 

LISTEN AND SHARE “JOY” BANDCAMP / SPOTIFY

“Millionaire” swoops in on a courtship doomed from the beginning: “He’s a Millionaire, and what a Millionaire says goes”. A sense of inferiority follows the protagonist in his efforts date a richer man than himself – the romance being cut short because of the poorer man’s insecurities. He decides: better to be alone than to feel beneath. 

“Millionaire” is the most delicate song on Engel. Sullen guitars glide over a rolling plain of harps, drones and underwater motifs with Deidre Nox’s beautiful vocals bringing an almost camp level of melodrama to its crescendo as Hardware and Nox sing together: “you can feel him like he’s always been there.” 

The song ends on a sour note, in a swamp of drones and fallen electrical wire buzzes – and back where the protagonist began. 

“Survivor’s Guilt” ties Engel to Hardware’s previous work with its premeditation on illness and the grief left in its wake. A digitized voice reads a sister’s eulogy to her brother lost to suicide after years of losing his friends around him to “a disease.” The six-minute instrumental takes respective production cues from both Boyz II Men and vaporwave. A chopped voice asks sadly, ‘How can I survive surviving?’ before Nox appears once again, singing the song (and album) to sleep. 

LISTEN AND SHARE “BLU AGAIN” SOUNDCLOUD / SPOTIFY

Engel’s cover art is adorned by an image by artist Chris Curreri called the Insomniac. Curreri’s work winks and nods to queer sex, emotionality and darkness, and this piece is no different. This is work that reaches back to queer artists such as Francis Bacon and brings back with it a timeless everyday horror faced by queers: shame. 

These are artists who visualize monsters and demons hiding in plain sight. Like singing to dead queer ancestors on Mutate, Repeat, Infinity, Hardware is trying to make sense of another queer cross-to-bear, this time coming from within. The image is gory and difficult, not unlike the process of digging shame from one’s spirit. Engel, in its preoccupation with angels, the afterlife and private thoughts holds hands with the image. 

 

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ENGEL TRACKLIST
1. Intro
2. Millionaire
3. Blu Again
4. Joy
5. Engel
6. Left Hand
7. Bound Together
8. Survivor’s Guilt

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SARAH HARMER SHARES NEW VIDEO FOR “ST. PETER’S BAY”

WATCH AND SHARE “ST. PETER’S BAY” HERE

THE “REMARKABLE” NEW ALBUM IS HARMER’S FIRST IN A DECADE OUT NOW VIA ARTS & CRAFTS

BUY / STREAM ARE YOU GONE HERE

"one of the most accomplished and affecting albums in her already remarkable catalogue" Exclaim! 9/10

“Harmer’s greatest strength is in her vocal conviction and clarity.” Bandcamp

“she unfurls the most gorgeous melody of the album, if not her entire career.” - on “Just Get Here”  The Boston Globe

Are You Gone is a journey across time, place, learning, and loss that Sarah Harmer is an incredibly gracious guide to take us on”  Folk Alley

"An artist long appreciated for her ability to survey a scene and describe it with such poetic clarity has honed her lyrical sensibilities even further.” Analogue

“a folky, minor-key song about ice skating at night, with a gentle vocal and a sturdy melody, that maps a precarious relationship onto the wintry conditions. “ on St. Peter’s Bay New York Times

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Photo Credit : Vanessa Heins // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

The video for "St. Peter's Bay", off Sarah Harmer's acclaimed new album, Are You Gone, is out now. Billboard says it is “certainly chilling as Harmer treks around the island, ice skates and sits in front of a small campfire.”

A swirling, expansive piano-and-guitar song about the grief at the end of a relationship (written while Sarah was on her way to a "Hockey Day" gig - The New York Times deadpanned in their write-up of the track, "How Canadian is this?"), the self-directed video takes viewers on a trip to the frozen, real-life St. Peter's Bay, for a cathartic last skate.

"I made this with filmmaker Josh Lyon,” says Harmer. “We hopped a late afternoon ferry to an island in the St Lawrence River and caught a brief window of mild weather and a bit of sun. For me this story takes place in a simpler time, when word was sent ‘on the wires of woodsmoke’ and ice was sure to freeze from one shore to another. The pain of ending a relationship is familiar in any era, and the vastness of the landscape in the middle of the river speaks to that timelessness.”

WATCH AND SHARE “ST. PETER’S BAY” HERE

Out now via Arts & Crafts, Are You Gone is a deeply personal and political collection of songs motivated by the beauty of life, the urgency of the climate crisis, and the question of loss. Sarah called the album a spiritual successor of sorts to her acclaimed 2000 debut, You Were Here, which made many year-end critics’ lists, and which TIME called the year’s best debut album. Its simple title, Are You Gone, is a meditation on the idea of presence, and a bookend to the questions posed on You Were Here - a sharpened, more electric confrontation with the realities of nature and human nature.

WATCH AND SHARE SARAH HARMER’S CBC FIRST PLAY LIVE PERFORMANCE HERE

LISTEN AND SHARE SARAH HARMER’S CBC q PERFORMANCE HERE

The result of an unshakeable inclination to make music in conflict with a lifestyle more attuned to privacy, quiet, and activism, Sarah wrote Are You Gone gradually over the last decade as she traded music for grassroots organizing as her “day job.” Between co-founding the citizen’s organization PERL (Protecting Escarpment Rural Land) and leading the coalition’s successful efforts to prevent a quarry from being built on the Niagara Escarpment, she became a fixture in local politics and advocacy, while keeping her musical chops fresh by writing and playing casually with friends. Finally, in 2019, while pondering the “ghosts” of loss, capitalism’s gluttony and music’s potential as a public platform, Sarah got to work on Are You Gone, her most sophisticated record to date.

WATCH AND SHARE SARAH HARMER’S NPR WORLD CAFE SESSIONS HERE

Encompassing a stylistic range from barebones folk to layered indie rock, album opener “St. Peter’s Bay” blends melancholic vocals and smooth atmospherics to effectively conjure the feeling of standing at dusk overlooking an endless sea, while “Take Me Out” is a modern, punchy alt-rock take on the near impossibility of letting go. “What I Was to You” is a tribute to Harmer’s lifelong friend Gord Downie of the Tragically Hip, and psychedelic-tinged piano ballad “The Lookout” tackles the angst of love-across-timezones. Penultimate track “Shoemaker”, about Sarah discovering an old book and census of her great great Glaswegian grandfather, calls to mind the gently ominous, slowly shifting chords of Sparklehorse before transforming into a gorgeous, almost-crescendoing show of Sarah’s vocal range. “See Her Wave” wraps the album with an acoustic goodbye written in memoriam to another friend who moved on.

WATCH AND SHARE “NEW LOW” LYRIC VIDEO HERE

Sarah has performed on The Late Show with David Letterman, Ellen, has been nominated for the Polaris Music Prize, garnered nine JUNO Award nominations and two wins, and been widely praised for her “razor-sharp songwriting chops” (NPR Music) and “plainly hooky” melodic sensibility (Rolling Stone).

Recently, due to the current global pandemic, Harmer has decided to postpone all of her upcoming tour dates. She issued this statement on the decision :

“After planning our upcoming tour for the past many months it is now clear that the prudent thing to do is to reschedule our spring dates to a time in the hopefully near future when the threat of the COVID-19 virus has passed. My band and I are sooo looking forward to making music for you when we can all come together safely and celebrate. We plan to honour all of the tickets at rescheduled shows. Please hold on to your tickets and we will share the revised plans as soon as possible. I have been really looking forward to this tour and of course I’m bummed it will have to wait a little longer. I’m sorry if this throws a wrench into your plans.

Signing off in solidarity with all the organizers out there who want to do what’s best to look after each other and our healthcare workers right now. Please take care and see you before long.”

BUY / STREAM ARE YOU GONE & VINYL DISCOGRAPHY HERE

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