Available now. A modern psych tribute to the hero of the genre, ROKY ERICKSON. Limited-edition yellow vinyl pressing of the compilation which featuries artists such as Darker My Love, Sarabeth Tucek and Le Volume Courbe. Includes an LP-sized print.
Available now. 2013 release, the third album from the critically acclaimed singer/songwriter. Tall Tall Shadow follows Basia's 2007 debut album Oh, My Darling, hailed by eMusic as "an undeniably infectious romp," and 2010's Heart of My Own, which Tiny Mix Tapes declared to be a "heart-wrenching tour de force." Basia has toured in the U.S., Canada, Europe and Australia, sharing the stage with artists including The National, St Vincent, Beirut, Tuneyards, Arcade Fire, Andrew Bird and Nick Cave.
Available now. 2013 release, the third album from the critically acclaimed singer/songwriter. Tall Tall Shadow follows Basia's 2007 debut album Oh, My Darling, hailed by eMusic as "an undeniably infectious romp," and 2010's Heart of My Own, which Tiny Mix Tapes declared to be a "heart-wrenching tour de force." Basia has toured in the U.S., Canada, Europe and Australia, sharing the stage with artists including The National, St Vincent, Beirut, Tuneyards, Arcade Fire, Andrew Bird and Nick Cave.
March 27 street date. 2021 JUNO Nominee: Adult Alternative Album Of the Year. Somewhere in the middle of making her new album, Are You in Love?, Basia Bulat took almost a whole year off. Because she had fallen in love, because her father died, because she had lost her sense of beauty and where it might be hidden. I want to make a really beautiful record about compassion, she had written to Jim James, the My Morning Jacket frontman, who had also produced 2016’s Good Advice. And the Mojave Desert had seemed perfect: the site for a quest. Inspired by singer-songwriters like Minnie Ripperton, Dolly Parton and Silvio Rodriguez, Bulat imagined a record full of sun-ups and sunsets – its lyrics so naked she was almost afraid to write them down. In the end, some of the words came easy—like the title track, or the Instagram-uncanny “Hall of Mirrors.” But the essence of others was much more difficult to express, tangled up in desire and reinvention. Bulat pushed herself to be more vulnerable, testing new kinds of collaboration: Are You in Love? includes lyrics written with a friend, U.S. Girls‘ Meg Remy, and everything from melting keyboard parts to desert field recordings by multi-instrumentalist Andrew Woods, whom Bulat married last summer. Still, the record wasn’t finished when Bulat left the desert, coming home to Montreal. “[I found] I was struggling between keeping it together and letting go,” Bulat explains. It would be nine more months before she was ready again to listen to her own voice—a process of grief, but also forgiveness and love. The result is a startling + gorgeous desert record, a singer who refuses to hide. “No Control” flashes like a girl-group’s stare, while “Your Girl” has Bulat cruising down the highway, doing her best Christine McVie. The album’s gradually thunderous closing tune, “Love Is At The End of the World,” is a blazing ever-after—and maybe the most thrilling thing Bulat has ever made.
March 27 street date. 2021 JUNO Nominee: Adult Alternative Album Of the Year. Somewhere in the middle of making her new album, Are You in Love?, Basia Bulat took almost a whole year off. Because she had fallen in love, because her father died, because she had lost her sense of beauty and where it might be hidden. I want to make a really beautiful record about compassion, she had written to Jim James, the My Morning Jacket frontman, who had also produced 2016’s Good Advice. And the Mojave Desert had seemed perfect: the site for a quest. Inspired by singer-songwriters like Minnie Ripperton, Dolly Parton and Silvio Rodriguez, Bulat imagined a record full of sun-ups and sunsets – its lyrics so naked she was almost afraid to write them down. In the end, some of the words came easy—like the title track, or the Instagram-uncanny “Hall of Mirrors.” But the essence of others was much more difficult to express, tangled up in desire and reinvention. Bulat pushed herself to be more vulnerable, testing new kinds of collaboration: Are You in Love? includes lyrics written with a friend, U.S. Girls‘ Meg Remy, and everything from melting keyboard parts to desert field recordings by multi-instrumentalist Andrew Woods, whom Bulat married last summer. Still, the record wasn’t finished when Bulat left the desert, coming home to Montreal. “[I found] I was struggling between keeping it together and letting go,” Bulat explains. It would be nine more months before she was ready again to listen to her own voice—a process of grief, but also forgiveness and love. The result is a startling + gorgeous desert record, a singer who refuses to hide. “No Control” flashes like a girl-group’s stare, while “Your Girl” has Bulat cruising down the highway, doing her best Christine McVie. The album’s gradually thunderous closing tune, “Love Is At The End of the World,” is a blazing ever-after—and maybe the most thrilling thing Bulat has ever made.
Please note new street date: April 1 (CD) / May 6 (LP). Introducing "The Garden": a STRINGS ALBUM and a RETROSPECTIVE from a room in Montreal with the windows open, and the wind moving, and the leaves changing, and a spring-coloured secret on the tip of Basia Bulat's tongue. The band made it in a pandemic. Bulat and her old friend Mark Lawson, with whom she recorded the Polaris- and Juno-nominated album "Tall Tall Shadow". Bulat and her husband, Legal Vertigo's Andy Woods. Bulat and her friends Ben Whiteley, Zou Zou Robidoux, Jen Thiessen, John Corban, and Tomo Newton, four fifths of whom form a string quartet, because did we mention this is a STRINGS ALBUM? Not a greatest hits but a re-configuration: a chance to record anew some songs that Bulat didn't fully understand when she originally composed them, five or ten or fifteen years ago. "The Garden" gathers fourteen string arrangements by three different arrangers (Owen Pallett, Paul Frith, and Zou Zou Robidoux), revisiting material from all five of Bulat's studio albums.
Please note new street date: May 6 (LP) / April 1 (CD). Introducing "The Garden": a STRINGS ALBUM and a RETROSPECTIVE from a room in Montreal with the windows open, and the wind moving, and the leaves changing, and a spring-coloured secret on the tip of Basia Bulat's tongue. The band made it in a pandemic. Bulat and her old friend Mark Lawson, with whom she recorded the Polaris- and Juno-nominated album "Tall Tall Shadow". Bulat and her husband, Legal Vertigo's Andy Woods. Bulat and her friends Ben Whiteley, Zou Zou Robidoux, Jen Thiessen, John Corban, and Tomo Newton, four fifths of whom form a string quartet, because did we mention this is a STRINGS ALBUM? Not a greatest hits but a re-configuration: a chance to record anew some songs that Bulat didn't fully understand when she originally composed them, five or ten or fifteen years ago. "The Garden" gathers fourteen string arrangements by three different arrangers (Owen Pallett, Paul Frith, and Zou Zou Robidoux), revisiting material from all five of Bulat's studio albums.