SAM WEBER SHARES “ALREADY KNOW” FROM UPCOMING LP

NEW ALBUM, GET FREE, OUT FEBRUARY 4, 2022 VIA SONIC UNYON

LISTEN AND SHARE “ALREADY KNOW” HERE

BUY / STREAM “ALREADY KNOW” HERE

Press Photo : Jacob Boll // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Having just wrapped a run of successful tour dates supporting Bahamas, Sam Weber is ready to share another new track from his upcoming LP, Get Free, due out February 4, 2022 via Sonic Unyon. "Already Know” started as “a very traditional song, kind of a waltz acoustic guitar thing that wasn’t really much of anything,” says Weber. “But, I liked the lyrics a lot and when I played it for co-producer Mallory Hauser, her instinct was to stretch it out into straight time with these free time sections. Once I figured out a new way to sing it, the song came together in a really beautiful way. It’s not a total Paul Simon diss-track, but the last verse does discuss the rumour of him stealing the idea for 'The Myth of Fingerprints' from Los Lobos."

LISTEN AND SHARE “ALREADY KNOW” HERE

BUY / STREAM “ALREADY KNOW” HERE

“Already Know” Single Art // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

MORE ABOUT GET FREE
Sam Weber's
storied exodus from his homeland of Canada to find new footing and opportunity in America resonates like a classic story of pain, loss, and rebirth. That narrative thread is woven throughout his new record, Get Free, offering a warm, intimate, and multidimensional portrait of the 28-year-old singer-songwriter. With this new collection of material, Weber reaches fresh emotional depths, commanding more expressive personal moments than ever before — at times within the margins of a single verse.

Sam Weber has already logged more miles as a gigging musician than most of his peers will in a lifetime, earning enviable accolades along the way (he was featured in Guitar Player a decade ago, by some accounts the youngest artist ever to grace those pages). He first picked up the guitar at age 12 to form a rock ’n’ roll band with his father and brother in the living room of their family home. 

LISTEN AND SHARE “MONEY” HERE

BUY / STREAM “MONEY” HERE

Sixteen years later, having collaborated with Grammy Award winners and with extensive international tours under his belt, the Canadian-born Los Angeleno goes forth with the same intention and mantra as when he began: “Music is an emotional conduit between people and allows us the opportunity to share moments of truth and unity. In an age where the ritual of music-making can be a solitary exercise, I want to live my life to remind everyone that playing music as a communal and spontaneous practice can be healing and powerful.”

After recording what Weber calls his “only real studio album,” Everything Comes True, which was cut live-off-the-floor in the iconic B room at Hollywood’s Ocean Way Studios, things began to move steadily for Sam. More frequent visits to Los Angeles had allowed him to make a name for himself, and he began to form friendships in the music community. He was tapped to contribute to a compilation album alongside Andrew Bird, Blake Mills, Jim James, Taylor Goldsmith (Dawes), Tim Heidecker, Tony Bennett, Kurt Vile, Jackson Browne, and Matt Berninger (The National). 

WATCH AND SHARE “HERE’S TO THE FUTURE” HERE

BUY / STREAM “HERE’S TO THE FUTURE” HERE 

“Initially, it was the music scene here that drew me in,” Sam notes. “So many of the albums that meant so much to me growing up came from this place, but when I finally set my feet in town, I was spellbound by everything I saw — especially the architecture. There’s an incredible variety of style and materials. The passage of time is so evident here and it can feel like a ruin. It’s not an old place as far as cities go, but the energy of the people who’ve passed through is enchanting.”

Charmed by the city of angels, Weber began the process of formally moving to Los Angeles and writing what would become Get Free. When COVID-19 rendered touring prospects inert and much of his initial recording plans impossible, he sought a new approach. 

“I wrote most of this music before the lockdown happened,” he says. “We wanted to go into another beautiful L.A. studio with another super band to record these new songs, but when all the plugs got pulled, we were sort of left holding nothing but the material. My partner Mallory Hauser (Mal, was keen to rally and share production duties with me to make the most of what we had, which was liberating somehow: to have this logistical ceiling on how we could record or approach these songs in our living room. We were forced to be as creative as possible with what we had. I think it was the best thing that could have happened to us.” 

Coming face-to-face with the realities of record making in the pandemic age, Sam and Malllory called upon their friend Danny Austin-Manning to join their pod and the trio began meeting up weekly for recording sessions in their Hollywood apartment. “Danny would come over and the three of us would turn on the microphones and give these wild, unchained performances of the material,” Weber recalls. “The songs became as much about the experience and ritual of spending time together as the content in the lyrics. I called the record Get Free because each performance of each song was a moment of transcendence and an escape for us from an otherwise odd, restrictive time.” 

Weber and Hauser tapped Grammy-nominated engineer Robbie Lackritz (Feist, Bahamas) to mix the album, having collaborated with him on the JUNO Award-nominated Bahamas album Sad Hunk. “I really love [Get Free], don’t get me wrong… but it sort of sounds janky…in a good way! Because our only option was to make it in our house, it gave us permission to let it be what was going to be and not get wrapped up in the details, and in turn I think that allowed the veil between the performances and the hearts of each song to be very thin. Robbie [Lackritz] sort of saved the record fidelity-wise; we gave him some questionable rough mixes with the room mics cranked up so loud. What we got back sounded way rad.”

A particular sense of grandness is felt in certain songs across Weber’s recorded catalogue. Moments that feel lofty, yet devoid of pretentiousness. With more of these moments present and tangible on Get Free than any other of his releases, the listener can effectively observe Sam’s emancipation. With this record he assumes a creative identity unique only to him. 


DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

GET FREE TRACKLIST
01 Truth Or Lie
02 Already Know
03 Get Out Of The Game
04 Don’t Cry For Me
05 Survival
06 Nowhere Bound
07 Here’s To The Future
08 Money
09 Everyone
10 Streets Of LA

SAM WEBER ONLINE
WEBSITE
TWITTER
INSTAGRAM
FACEBOOK 

COTS RELEASES AUTUMNAL VIDEO FOR “SUN-SPOTTED APPLE”

STEPH YATES’S ACCLAIMED DEBUT ALBUM DISTURBING BODY IS OUT NOW ON BOILED RECORDS

WATCH & SHARE "SUN-SPOTTED APPLE" HERE 

BUY / STREAM DISTURBING BODY HERE

“Disturbing Body feels like a meditation on loneliness and the complexities of the heart ... a secret told from Cots to you only - CBC Music

"A fascinating English language affair which evokes both the sophistication of Everything But The Girl's Eden and the sadness of Portuguese fado" - MOJO

“Cots leans into gentleness” - Exclaim!! 

Photo Credit: JG+Shi // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Disturbing Body, the intimate debut album by Cots, paints a celestial portrait of lost love and consequence. Celebrated by CBC Music for its Feist-like softness – “carefully worded observations woven between sparse chords, holding your attention with each subdued syllable” – the solo project of Montreal/Guelph composer, singer, and guitarist Steph Yates blends elements of bossa nova, folk, jazz, and classical against a modern art backdrop, her subtly unconventional style brushed across its lush palette. 

Released today, the music video for “Sun-spotted Apple” is a mysterious, autumnal affair that features sketches of late season baseball, peak season apples, and Yates eccentrically outfitted in multiple imagined glamour scenes. The song’s sensuous sway and morose organ are invoked by the stage of fallen leaves and visual artist Yates effortlessly acting out the song upon it. She says:

“I made this video with my friends Jade Perry, Sara and Emma Bortolon-Vettor, Emma Howarth-Withers, and Alanna Gurr. We shot it in one evening in my garden in Guelph. Jade coordinated the outfits and we dreamt up a series of vignettes to unfold over the course of the song—leaving ample room for improvisation and behind-the-scenes tomfoolery.”

In addition to today’s video, tomorrow Cots will release an alternate version of the song, entitled “Sun-spotted Apple (Silver Apple Version),recorded with producer Sandro Perri and engineer Scott Merritt at the Disturbing Body sessions in a more spacious and delicate arrangement for guitar, voice, bass, keys, and horns.

WATCH & SHARE "SUN-SPOTTED APPLE" HERE 

Sparked by the power of celestial mechanics and her fascination with mathematics' vast poetic potential, Disturbing Body explores the unexplainable interactions of interstellar bodies and human beings alike. The title – inspired by the phrase for a planet whose gravitational pull alters another planet's course – speaks similarly to the disruptive nature of love. The ten songs of Disturbing Body are asterisms drawn to Yates’s mellifluous voice, to her cryptic tales flushed with pastel colour. “Flowers” presents Cots’s masterful blend of the delicate and the macabre: a gorgeous meditation on death that highlights her provoking lyricism. “Our Breath” showcases the album’s experimental tint and sundown habitat, softly flooded with warbled vocal effects and flanged hand drums.

The album's opening track, “Disturbing Body,” is a starry, forlorn, askew dirge that pulls you into its mysterious space with Yates's enchanting voice: Searching for your disturbing body / The math doesn’t add up when I do it alone, amidst quiet passages of metallic percussion, bass solo, and strands of near silence. It is the perfect bookend to the album’s closing passage, “Midnight at the Station”: mysterious and lonesome, melodious yet vividly disquieting, an ambiguous end to the off-kilter note it began on.

The deft sonic precision of Disturbing Body evokes Yates’s understated yet detailed songcraft and attention to lyrical play. Over ponderous instrumental incursions – featuring the performances of Blake Howard (percussion), Josh Cole (bass guitar), Ryan Brouwer (trumpet), Karen Ng (saxophone), Thomas Hammerton (keyboards), and Perri himself (synths, samples, field recordings) – Yates’s crystalline voice carries the gravitas of the album’s ten elegiac movements. 

“These songs, for the most part, have to do with the heart, something I was shy to write about previously,” Yates reveals. “It's possible my deepening love for Brazilian music, wherein some of my favourite artists sing freely about o coração, emboldened me in this way. As a collection, the songs give a prismatic view of a lone heart in its course having known closeness and having known loss.” 

BUY / STREAM DISTURBING BODY HERE

Across Disturbing Body’s disparate touchpoints and searching melodies – somewhere between the stars and earthly interactions alike – Cots intersects, and starts to make a whole lot of sense. “A cot is a solitary, introspective, and dreamy space. It’s temporary too, suggesting liminality, moving on, passing through. It’s something you leave behind.” 

“I find it strange, unsettling, mysterious; how incalculable the experience of feeling drawn to someone is,” Yates closes. “Human bodies are like celestial ones; just as a planet’s course is carved out in relation to others, our course - where we go and what we do - is compelled by forces of attraction.”

ALBUM ARTWORK // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

DISTURBING BODY TRACKLIST
1. Disturbing Body
2. Bitter Part of the Fruit
3. Sun-Spotted Apple
4. Bluebird
5. Inertia of a Dream
6. Flowers
7. Salt or Sand
8. Our Breath
9. Last Sip
10. Midnight at the Station

COTS ONLINE
WEBSITE
INSTAGRAM
FACEBOOK
BANDCAMP 

PONDERCAST EPISODE 185 : IDK


LISTEN TO PONDERCAST EP 185 : IDK

GET ‘THE SIGNAL’ EXPERIENCE EVERY MONTH WITH ‘PONDERCAST RADIO’ - SPECIAL CONTENT FOR PATREON SUBSCRIBERS

SUBSCRIBE TO GROUND LEVEL - THE NEW PODCAST FROM LAURIE BROWN

LISTEN TO PONDERBEAT EPISODE 10 HERE

SUBSCRIBE TO PONDERCAST ON
ITUNES / SPOTIFY / YOUTUBE

Episode 185 of Laurie Brown’s Pondercast was inspired by an interview with Misha Glouberman that Laurie conducted over on her new sister podcast Ground Level, about difficult conversations. 

“This episode is about what makes a great conversation,” says Laurie. “I say it’s not what you know...but what you don’t know. What happens when you start a conversation with ‘I don’t know’. Where do you go from there? As Misha suggests, ‘we all want to say something new’. I agree.”

LISTEN TO PONDERCAST EP 185 : IDK

For Season 5, a few new things are happening while some others are getting their own spotlight. First, the Pondercast team is bringing you something entirely new yet a little reminiscent of times past. Pondercast Radio uses an innovative hack of streaming technology to bring you a once a month ‘radio show’ which you can stream at any time. The show will include a new playlist of music and Laurie’s introductions for your dining and dancing pleasure.  The episodes play out exactly like radio, feel like Laurie’s old show The Signal - and you will get a 2 hour show of new music for you to fall in love with every month.

Pondercast Radio is available only to those who support Pondercast via Patreon at any level. Supporters must also have a paid Spotify or Apple Music account to access Pondercast Radio. If you have a paid account on Apple Music or on Spotify, then you can get our monthly ‘radio’ shows delivered to your inbox.

SUPPORT PONDERCAST VIA PATREON HERE

The other big news is the new podcast Ground Level which is out now. Pondercast is moving all of their weekly guided meditations to a brand new podcast. So if you have been meditating with Laurie, subscribe to Ground Level wherever you get your podcasts to be sure you don’t miss an episode. Look for interviews and other content to help navigate these strange days. 

SUBSCRIBE TO GROUND LEVEL - THE NEW PODCAST FROM LAURIE BROWN

SUBSCRIBE TO PONDERCAST ON
ITUNES / SPOTIFY / YOUTUBE

Recently, Killbeat Music partnered with the team at Pondercast to bring you Ponderbeat, a series of special episodes featuring selections curated by Brown from some of Killbeat’s latest releases. The ninth episode of Ponderbeat is live now, featuring music from Charlotte Cornfield, Ouri, Andy Shauf, Cots, Absolutely Free, Homeshake, and more.

LISTEN TO PONDERBEAT EPISODE 10 HERE

PONDERCAST ONLINE
WEBSITE
TWITTER
FACEBOOK
INSTAGRAM