
Here are two albums working a money motif but not in any direction you might expect. Whether it’s millions or billions they’re referring to the musical results are solid gold.
I can’t stop listening to Canadian Kathleen Edwards’ new album Billionaire. It’s a lush acoustic Americana affair offering plenty of variety within that genre. From the killer should-be hit single opener “Save Your Soul” to the spare vocal testimony of album closer “Pine” this is an LP that is just so easy to keep putting on. There’s not a weak song in the batch and the performances really showcase Edwards’ vocal flexibility. Songs like “Save Your Soul” and “Little Red Ranger” have the folk pop sheen of Suzanne Vega, the latter even featuring a Toronto Maple Leafs shout out. “Say Goodbye, Tell No One” feels more Natalie Merchant to me. Then there’s “FLA” and “Other People’s Bands” where I think Brandi Carlyle would be a more appropriate comparison. The band is also pretty fantastic, utilizing a Tom Petty slow swagger to showcase Edwards’ lyrical social commentary on “When The Truth Comes Out” and “Need a Ride.” Title track “Billionaire” is the album outlier, featuring a very different vocal and instrumental attack. Lighter, more airy, like being pulled in close when someone has something important to say just to you. When Edwards sings ‘if this feeling were a currency I would be a billionaire’ the emotional imagery is striking. Get a copy of Billionaire, it’s worth every dollar.
Canadian band The Killjoys enjoyed some time in the sun with recordings spanning the mid to late 1990s. But solo the band’s main singer and songwriter Mike Trebilcock is mostly known for cranking out quality b-movie horror film soundtracks. But we do have his criminally overlooked 2001 longplayer Shield Millions for some sense of where stardom might have taken him. The record is an amazing repository of reverb, jangle and outrageously good hooks, delivered in both power pop and country hues. This kicks off with the obvious radio-ready single, “Stark Raving Glad.” This takes me back to the 1990s poprock feel of the Northern Pikes or Eugene Edwards. “Sale of the Century” turns things toward an Americana vein that features strongly on the album. Sometimes it’s light and jaunty (“Snow Angel Blues”) or acoustic singer/songwriter (“Box of Failures”) or even drawing on a New Orleans elan (“Dog Hill”). “Stacked Back to the Wishing Well” adds a few more Nashville notes to the country vibe. I hear a dark Elvis Costello echo across both “Today’s Crossword” and “This Side of Human.” Shaking us out of the Americana ambience, “Shut Us Up (and Make Us Smile)” has a grungier pop sound. “Pretty Girl Bruise” wraps things up by gearing down into an introspective Bruce Cockburn-like tune. Love the horns on this song! We really could use more Mike Trebilcock like this.
Money is super helpful is living is your aim. While every artist does a bit of starving to get to their creative destination, these recordings suggest these two have arrived and are ready to meet your cash contribution. Just visit the hyperlinks above.
Photo ‘A boy and his tunnel’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.
Billionaire is a wonderful album, and it’s a shame it never charted in the U.S.
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Well, it only came out last month so there’s still time!
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