Edmonton Journal

Christa Couture fashions a more playful sound

New album Long Time Leaving is upbeat despite dark themes,

- writes Tom Harrison.

Christa Couture had to lighten up.

It’s impossible to discuss Couture’s provocativ­e and personal music without putting it into context. She witnessed her two children die at different times; cancer in her left leg left her standing, barely, with a prosthetic replacemen­t. Her songs are imbued with this sorrow, and the resolve they convey is remarkable.

By comparison, her new album Long Time Leaving is relief. Not comic relief — its central theme is about the breakup of her marriage. But it’s not dark: in If I Still Love You, she sings that she would still like to be friends with former husband Nick, and the song Zookeeper sounds happy. It’s a lighter album with an occasional nod to country that makes it even brighter.

Importantl­y, it’s her second album produced by Steve Dawson. Recorded at The Henhouse Studio in the former Vancouveri­te’s adopted Nashville, Long Time Leaving benefits from his sympatheti­c understate­ment.

“I knew I wanted to work with him a second time,” Couture said. “I wanted to make an album that would be fun. I needed a break. I wanted something more lightheart­ed. I went down there knowing that I didn’t want a record to make me cry, or make others cry.

“I felt like he really understood what I was trying to do,” she continued. “We had a conversati­on of how to make this album.

“He really understood when I said I wanted to make something that was fun. I wanted to enjoy it.”

Long Time Leaving isn’t laughout-loud funny, but Couture sounds playful and the arrangemen­ts, notably on Lovely Like You, are upbeat, the spare production creating atmosphere.

The album arrives after a period of change for her. There was the end of the marriage and then Couture’s decision to leave Vancouver for Toronto.

“I’ve been here less than a year,” she said. “I was coming here off and on. I still don’t feel like I belong.

“Part of coming here is that the music scene is here. Vancouver is great, but there is so much more here.”

And then there is the prosthetic leg. Through a public funding campaign, she was able to raise the necessary $25,000. The new leg gave her more freedom and mobility that enabled her to tour.

“It changed my life,” Couture said.

“I can enjoy going for a walk. For 20 years I couldn’t do that.”

 ?? JEN SQUIRES ?? Former Vancouveri­te Christa Couture recorded her new album in Nashville.
JEN SQUIRES Former Vancouveri­te Christa Couture recorded her new album in Nashville.

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