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On
March 11, 2010, Great Big Sea celebrated their seventeenth birthday
as a band. And like almost every one of their many anniversaries
spent together, they celebrated it by playing a concert, this one in
Omaha, Nebraska. For the players it was an important landmark, but
for the fans, some of whom had travelled hundreds of miles, it was a
chance to spend a night with a band that has come to define the
energetic spirit of Newfoundland. Somewhere along the way, Great Big
Sea ceased to be just a band – for the three core members and their
assorted collaborators, it’s a way of life.
“No one is more surprised than us that we have lasted almost 18
years,” points out lead singer Alan Doyle. “Like most bands, when we
started we were just looking forward to the next tour, the next show
or the next song. Then, after a few years we realized that we liked
doing this more than anything else. So we kept going.”
The band has its roots in St. John’s rowdy pubs, where co-founders
Sean McCann and Bob Hallett met while playing Newfoundland folk
songs for boisterous crowds made up of hard-partying university
students and off-duty fishermen. In 1993, after meeting fellow
socio-holic and pub stalwart Alan Doyle they started Great Big Sea,
in an attempt to create a new approach to Newfoundland folk music,
one that combined their original music with the traditional sounds
and instruments they had grown up with. In 2002 drummer Kris
MacFarlane joined the band, and a year later bass player Murray
Foster came aboard.
Their latest album, Safe Upon the Shore, reflects the newest twists
in their original plan. The album is a feast of creative impulses,
recorded in fits and starts over a six month period. Some of it was
recorded in New Orleans with producer Steve Berlin, while other
songs were recorded at the band’s studio in St. John’s. The band
used guerilla setups to record the rest of it on tour buses and in
various dressing rooms.
“A lot of this was recorded straight onto Alan’s laptop, as soon as
we had the ideas,” says Sean McCann, singer and bodhran player. “As
for the rest, for a long time we wanted to record somewhere with a
vibe, somewhere with an atmosphere that might seep into the songs
themselves. There is nowhere on the continent, really, that has more
of a vibe than New Orleans.”
The band took advantage of a wide range of collaborators. During the
fall of 2009 they hosted a minisongwriting retreat in Western
Newfoundland with musicians and writers Jeremy Fisher, Jeen O’Brien,
Paul Lamb and Joel Plaskett.
“At this stage, we sometimes all kind of know each other’s ideas too
well,” explains multi-instrumentalist and singer Bob Hallett. “It’s
too easy to do the obvious. Writing with a big group of people
pushed everything into different directions. Of the songs we started
there, we ended up using a bunch of them on the album.”
“Some of these songs took a long time to grow up, some of them came
to us ready to head out into the world,” added McCann.
The songs on Safe Upon the Shore cover the many strains of the
band’s inspirations, but also reflect the real concerns of men
trying to balance family and life while spending so many months in
the adolescent world of a touring band. Nothing But A Song speaks of
the backstage tensions that sometimes test their own relationships,
while Dear Home Town is about the things that get left behind. The
delicate Follow Me Back is pure sentiment, a small love note to
those who have stayed with them for so many years. The boisterous
folk rock of Road To Ruin and Wandering Ways talk about the bands
raucous years in the pubs. Long Life, the albums driving opener, is
all about the passage of time, and the constant push and pull
between band and home.
While music fashions come and go, Great Big Sea has continued to
build audiences across the continent. A hard working approach to
touring and performance, along with a genuine love for the music
they perform, has kept the band growing, despite being pretty much
immune to musical fashions. Numerous side projects, from Doyle’s
acting and soundtrack work to McCann’s solo projects to Hallett’s
writing keep them busy when they aren’t touring with the band. While
some groups might bristle at these distractions, for Great Big Sea
it is just fuel to the fire that drives their artistry.
“There’s a lot of creativity in this band, “says Doyle, “too much
for an album every two years. We all have lots of other ideas,
ambitions, and paths we want to travel – that said, we wouldn’t have
stuck together this long if we didn’t know how special this band
was. We are not finished yet by a long shot.”
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Presented in conjunction with NCBPAC & Landshark Entertainment
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