The Telegram (St. John's)

Corb Lund’s seventh album inspired by cowboys, ranchers and family history

- BY JESSICA VITULLO

Three

years ago, Corb Lund began a long struggle to produce his seventh studio album.

“I was just hitting a wall after the sixth record,” the 43-year-old country artist said in a recent interview. “I was really stumped for a while.”

For the first year and a half of the album-writing process, Lund spent time living in Las Vegas, New York and Austin, Texas.

He then retreated to the northern Alberta log cabin he built with his aunt and uncle.

After he finished writing the songs, Lund brought them to a recording studio in Edmonton.

His touring band, Corb Lund and the Hurtin’ Albertans bass player Kurt Ciesla, guitarist Grant Siemens and drummer Brandy Valgardson, spent only two weeks recording the songs for the album, aptly named “Cabin Fever.”

“After being out there (in the cabin) by myself for a few weeks, you start to feel a little snicky,” he said of how he chose the album title.

The song recording followed a unique format.

Lund and his band members have recorded songs in layers, meaning each member plays their part and it gets recorded separately.

This time, Lund said they were tired of that and wanted to do something different.

“We did everything at the same time,” he said of recording the songs together. “If you’ve got a band that goes together like us, there’s a real cohesion to it.”

“Cabin Fever” features a second CD with the same songs as the first, but done completely in acoustics.

“I think it showcases a different side of the band,” said Lund. “My guys are versatile and it helps dis- play that.”

Lund draws on inspiratio­n for his lyrics through his family history.

“My grandpas were ranchers and my dad’s a cowboy too,” he said. “They used to sing these old trail songs, these old ballads.”

It wasn’t long before Lund real- ized he could pick up his guitar and play these cowboy songs.

Although this is where his inspiratio­n comes from, Lund says there is no overall theme for the album.

“I get bored easily,” he says. “I try to make records interestin­g. I try to make them flow in an interestin­g way.”

The first song on the album, “Gettin’ Down on the Mountain,” is about civilizati­on meltdown. Lund says in the country, people are used to preparing for disaster, like a twoweek blizzard that he’s seen on the ranch.

“The One Left in the Chamber” has a completely different message and tone.

“It’s a song about suicide,” he said. “It’s a very dark one.”

Lund said suicide ballads were a popular theme in the old days, but he doesn’t see people recording them as much today.

Corb Lund and the Hurtin’ Albertans will headline the Edmonton Folk Festival Aug. 12. Lund said he hasn’t played in the festival in years.

“It was more of a side stage kind of thing,” he said of his last performanc­e in the festival. “(Being on the) main stage in Edmonton is a huge thing for me. It’s like a huge homecoming.”

“Cabin Fever” will be released worldwide on August 14.

 ?? — Photo by The Canadian Press ?? Musician Corb Lund poses for photo in this recent handout image.
— Photo by The Canadian Press Musician Corb Lund poses for photo in this recent handout image.

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