Calgary Herald

Said the Whale swimming in a bigger pool

Vancouver band moves past being a Vancouver band

- FRANCOIS MARCHAND

When Said the Whale’s Tyler Bancroft wrote the song 2010, with its Olympics undertones, his original feelings were that of pride and enthusiasm for his city.

Following the Stanley Cup riots last June, pride turned to shame. “It’s almost like an anti-vancouver song,” Bancroft said of the way 2010 has morphed, especially in its video treatment featuring footage from the riots, cars ablaze next to the downtown Bay store and masked individual­s roaming the streets. “But it’s really not.”

Sitting alongside fellow guitarist and co-songwriter Ben Worcester and drummer Spencer Schoening during a recent interview with Postmedia News, Bancroft admitted it isn’t all that surprising that Said the Whale’s latest effort, Little Mountain, contains myriad references to the city where the members of the band spend most of their time.

Little Mountain, since it refers to a Vancouver neighbourh­ood, is a bit of a Vancouver-centric title, but Bancroft admitted the choice of album title deliberate­ly extended beyond the city.

In fact, Bancroft explained, Little Mountain is a common place name in North America, something that gives the album a sense of place and connection on a larger geographic­al scale.

“Our hope is that there are other Little Mountains in North America where people might be listening to the album,” Bancroft said. “A lot of times, our band gets pigeonhole­d as a band that writes a lot about Vancouver. While that’s entirely true, the point of naming the record a name that is a bunch of other places is that there’s a storytelli­ng aspect to all the songs that should resonate with people, whether they’re in Vancouver or somewhere else.”

The heart of the album is Big Wave Goodbye, a slow buildup of a song about touring, leaving familiarit­y and moving onto new things, with part of the song lifted from Pretty City (from the Bear Bones EP released in 2010).

Big Wave Goodbye, which ends on a jammy, horns-heavy note, makes sense in the context of a band whose aspiration­s are now bigger than ever.

Said the Whale’s coronation as New Group of the Year at the 2011 Juno Awards came hot on the heels of a second-place finish in the 2010 Peak Performanc­e Project, which won the indie rock quintet $75,000.

Their first trip to the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, last year was also documented in the one-hour CBC television special, Winning America, which was originally broadcast only in B.C. last fall.

Being so busy — with plenty of touring over the past few years — probably explains why the followup to 2009’s Islands Disappear took so long to come to life.

“It probably could have come faster, but it might have felt rushed,” Bancroft said. “And there certainly wouldn’t have been 20 songs recorded. It would have been a lot different.”

From the recording sessions with longtime producer and “sixth member” Tom Dobrzanski, four songs ended up on the New Brighton EP, released last fall, and 15 made the cut for Little Mountain. A cover of Tokyo Police Club’s A Lesson in Crime will be an itunes-only album bonus.

The variety of the material on the album can seem jarring upon first listen, with Worcester’s songs feeling a little more Stan Rogersinfl­ected (The Reason, O Alexandra), while Bancroft’s material retains a poppier James Mercer/ Shins-like quality (We Are 1980, Loveless, and the My Sharonaesq­ue Heavy Ceiling).

Then there are the more atmosphere-driven transition­s like Lover/friend and the loopy, Beatles-esque Guilty Hypocrites, songs that signal the shift from the lighter to the darker side of the album. Bancroft said that those two sides will literally be applied to the double-vinyl version of the album, with one platter white and the other black.

“I think the variety is the only way we can justify such a long album,” Schoening said, when it is pointed out that, at 48 minutes, Little Mountain is Said the Whale’s lengthiest offering to date.

“I think what’s cool about Little Mountain is that it really is an album,” Bancroft said. “We’ve thought about the songs and the order they go in and the split in the middle.

“But you can also listen to each track individual­ly and it’s its own thing, which means the album fits in both categories. You can skip around on your ipod or listen to the whole album and not get bored of too many of the same songs.”

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 ?? Postmedia News Archive ?? Indie rockers Said the Whale play Mac Hall Thursday.
Postmedia News Archive Indie rockers Said the Whale play Mac Hall Thursday.

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