![]() Since then the email chains have grown (Canning says it takes thousands of emails to organize everything it takes for a new Broken Social Scene record release), but the mission remains the same. We tried really hard to break through when things were easier logistically and financially and we never quite got there.’”įortunately the voices outside eventually overpowered the internal ones and Drew set out to do what he’s done every few years since he and a few others recorded Feel Good Lost in 2001. You live a humble life and think, ‘Maybe our time came. Charlie and I were on the fence because you don’t know anymore if people care. He was coming to Toronto and meeting with the guys. If we’re going to do this, we’re going to want new material.’ Joe Chiccarelli was also really pushing for us to make a record with him. “Charles called me the next day and said, ‘I just want to play shows now.’ Within that, Brendan was also really adamant about saying, ‘Let’s record a new record then. “After that horrible night in Paris where you feel not only for all of the families involved, the fans, the venue, and the band, you also feel for this idea that just hit so close to home,” says Drew. It also took a moment of legitimate terror to strike a communal chord. It took those inside and outside of the band to convince Drew to rally the musical troops. Despite the success of that album, the myriad successful projects associated with the band, the supergroup status attached to the name Broken Social Scene, Drew needed some encouragement to believe the fans who were there in the past would be there again. Seven years have passed since the band’s last album, Forgiveness Rock Record, a near lifetime in the “here today, gone today” modern musical climate. The ringleader, if there must be one, for Broken Social Scene points to the calendar as his primary reason for doubt. Because I think we've always been a band that's been a celebration." True to his word, Drew and company have rendered Hug Of Thunder exactly that.Kevin Drew wasn’t sure anyone would care. In a recent interview, Broken Social Scene's de facto leader Kevin Drew cited the Paris terror attacks of 2015 as a wake-up call, one that spurred the group's return: "It just sort of made us want to get out there and play. That doesn't mean, however, the group isn't reacting to the less-than-ideal state of the world. Rather than angry, it's a bittersweet confection that dissolves into a breakneck bridge of soaring guitar heroics. Similarly, the title of "Protest Song," one of the album's standout tracks, is not indicative of its sound. ![]() She's more downbeat, yet no less evocative, on the elegantly brooding "Victim Lover." "Gonna Get Better" belies its title by sticking to a subdued groove and a swirling, contemplative tone - the feeling of flipping through folders of old photos, letting the rush of memories come. A member of the offshoot AroarA with Broken Social Scene's Andrew Whiteman, she lends piercing elation to "Stay Happy," a burst of symphonic pop with a massive yet laid-back beat. ![]() When it comes to a mix of ethereality and strength, new vocalist Ariel Engle is no slouch. Later on, the album's celestial title track erupts into a typically majestic chorus, complete with lit-major attention to storytelling and symbolic detail, led by Broken Social Scene breakout star Leslie Feist who pulls off a Kate Bush-level of otherworldliness. "Halfway Home" is an upward spiral of a song, buoyed by washes of orchestral euphoria and weightless, male-female harmonies worthy of My Bloody Valentine. After an atmospheric instrumental opening harking all the way back to Feel Good Lost, the band kicks in with the anthems. The band has been mostly silent, studio-wise, since 2010's Forgiveness Rock Record - the various members of its loose-knit roster keep themselves busy in other high-profile acts such as Feist, Stars and Metric, not to mention the occasional solo album - but the Toronto collective is at last set to return with its fifth full-length, Hug Of Thunder (out July 7 on Arts & Crafts).įeaturing all 15 original members of the band (Broken Social Scene has never done minimal), Hug Of Thunder does not skimp. The group's ambient, experimental 2001 debut, Feel Good Lost gave way to the wide-angle vision of its 2002 breakthrough, You Forgot It In People, an album of giddy highs and moody lows. Before taking a break of seven years from releasing albums, Broken Social Scene established itself as one of indie rock's most epic practitioners. ![]()
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