Monday, April 6, 2009

Album: Great Lake Swimmers / Lost Channels

Artist: Great Lake Swimmers

Title: Lost Channels

The fourth album under the GLS name goes the furthest in the steady progression from bandonym to band, with a fuller, more rocking sound. This doesn't mean that the arrangements overwhelm Tony Dekker's words so much as the fact that this no longer merely feels like the work of a singer/songwriter being fleshed out by the instruments around him. This also helps close the gap between album and performance, one spot where past GLS efforts have always felt a little frustrating. Dekker's voice is still best appreciated in a rewarding acoustic setting, but this is getting closer to the mark.

Meanwhile, we are rewarded here with some more top-shelf songs from one our premiere balladeers. "Still", whose title might call up images of inertness instead pulls from Tony's bag of metaphors to invoke a yearning sense of potentiality. Closer "Unison Falling Into Harmony" is simply one of Dekker's loveliest songs, a river waltz with wind and gravity and the forces behind the aching desire to break through the unknowability and beauty of another.1

Also noteworthy is "Concrete Heart"2 which uses Toronto's brutalist architecture as landmarks of love won and lost:

This is the place where I felt
like the world's tallest self-supporting tower
at least for a little while, anyway

The lyric slides a bit in the second verse, to something that should be deserving of a grant or Cultural Award for a perfect summation of the Torontonian and Canadian mindset:

This is the place where I felt
like the world's tallest self-supporting tower
(or maybe number two)
at least for a little while, anyway

A very lovely album that felt warm and yielding from the outset while still hinting that there remain depths yet to discover — a most welcome and sought-after companion.

Track Picks: 4 - "Concrete Heart", 9 - "Still", 12 - "Unison Falling Into Harmony"


1 This song's deployment in public spaces may lead to dangerous outbreaks of hand-holding.

2 A song I shall probably always carry an irrationally fond affection for from having been lucky enough to witness its debut.

No comments:

Post a Comment